Frederick Douglas's Childhood

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Slavery has been a big part of America’s history, influencing how millions of people lived their lives. Slaves were brought over to the New World against their will to an unfamiliar area. Most were not taught to read or write because in the eyes of slave owners, this was thought not to be necessary. However, there were some slaveowners who took it upon themselves to give their slaves a chance to gain these abilities that way they may be well equipped for life once free. Frederick Douglass was an enslaved black man during Lincoln’s presidency, a turning point in history. When Frederick Douglass was younger, he had a more close-minded perspective than when he became older. In Frederick Douglass’ childhood, he met many peoples who caused him …show more content…

Douglass was very involved with the points Lincoln made to abolish slavery. Lincoln had declared that the cause of the Civil War had been slavery, and that since it had been abolished, the nation needed to heal (Freedman 44). Douglass was in the crowd during this speech, and “Following the ‘wonderfully quiet, earnest, and solemn” ceremony, Douglas wanted to congratulate Lincoln personally (Freedman 44). Despite his numerous efforts and persistence, the police would not let Douglass into the White House due to his race (Freedman 45). Then, when Lincoln was assassinated, Douglass was the most devastated he had ever been when Lincoln was assassinated a few days later, because he had related so closely to the words Lincoln spoke, and he had come to had come to “appreciate Lincoln’s sensitivity to popular opinion” and admire his skills as a politician (Freedman 47). And although during the war, Douglass had been critical of Lincoln, saying that he was moving too slowly against slavery, when he heard the news of Lincoln’s assassination, Douglass called it a “personal as well as national calamity” (Freedman 46-47). The way that Douglass felt towards the events that happened in his late life, and the emotions that he experienced through Lincoln’s death was the result of him being more involved in what was going on with slavery, and with the

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