Frederick Douglass Autobiographies

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Frederick Douglass, a human rights leader, author, and public speaker, was a well known African American man that played a huge role in the civil rights movement as well as the anti-slavery movement. Over the years his success paid off after he became one of the first African American citizens to have a high U.S. government rank, he became one of the first African Americans to become Vice president of the United States. Frederick Douglass was born at the time slavery was big, around 1818 in Talbot County, Maryland, though his actual date of birth is unknown; Frederick had chosen to celebrate his birthday every 14th of February. Frederick Douglass lived with his maternal grandmother for a while, then was later selected to live in a home owned by plantation owners, one of them who could have …show more content…

He wrote numerous autobiographies about his experiences dealing with slavery as well as how he lived after the civil war had ended with successful results. His first ever autobiography, “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave,” was published in 1845 gaining lots of attention in the U.S, it was also translated into several European languages. He also published three other versions of his autobiography, “My Bondage and My Freedom,” published in 1855, and “Life and Times of Frederick Douglass,” published and revised in 1892. Although Douglass gained a lot of fans and admirers, he also gained critics that doubted his opinions because he was a former slave with very little to no education. Most slaves were not allowed to be taught to read or write due to a ban that was created during the times of slavery. Although the ban was in action, Frederick defied the ban’s orders and was taught by a slaveholder’s wife; Sophia Auld; who taught him how to say the alphabet at the age of 12. After Sophia gave him lessons her husband, Hugh Auld, from Baltimore, soon forbade her to continue to

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