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About The Book
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<p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>With a new foreword by Amber O'Neal Johnston author and </span>established authority on infusing diverse voices in traditional curricula.</p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>This is the story of one of the noblest men in American history-a man who escaped from slavery to become one of the great leaders of his century-a friend to Lincoln and other great statesmen of his generation.&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>Thirty years before the Civil War Frederick Douglass was a slave-his lot hard labor in the cotton fields frequent lashings a starvation diet and prayers before breakfast.</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>How Douglass learned to read and taught his fellow slaves; how he planned and finally accomplished his escaped from Maryland to New York and thence to New Bedford is a thrilling and emotional tale. But the story of his long public career the work he did the causes he espoused the friends he made and the positions of trust and honor he filled is one of almost superhuman accomplishment.</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>Shortly after he and his young wife Anna arrived in New Bedford Douglass became an active participant in the abolitionist movement. It was at this time he met and became the friend of William Lloyd Garrison. Later he was to found the famous abolitionist newspaper </span><em style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>The North Star</em><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)> and to lecture in both America and England supporting every progressive cause of his day.</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>John Brown hid in the attic of the Douglass home after the Kansas massacre and it was there that he planned the Virginia campaign which ended in the debacle of Harpers Ferry his death and in Douglass' flight to England with the Governor of Virginia threatening to send a warship after him.</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>Frederick Douglass returned to America in time to help elect Abraham Lincoln and through half a dozen administrations he remained an influence in Washington holding positions of honor that culminated in his appointment as Minister to Haiti.</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>Shirley Graham brought to her research and study a youthful admiration for Douglass. When she was a child her father used to tell her stories of how Douglass visited the old Wayne County farmhouse where Miss Graham was born. The farmhouse had been purchased by her great-great-grandfather long before the Civil War after he had been freed from slavery and it subsequently became a station in the underground railway. Frederick Douglass had been a frequent visitor during her father's childhood.</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(128 128 128 1)>Originally published as one of the Messner Biographies series. </span></p>