Frederick Douglass Abolition Movement Essay

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Abolition Movement from Frederick Douglass Perspective By the 1830’s, slavery was primarily located in the South. African Americans were enslaved on small farms, large plantations, inside homes and outside in the fields. The underlying concept was always the same, they were considered property and it was because they were black. Frederick Douglass was among those slaves branded the property of Hugh Auld. It is where Douglass would acquire the skills that catapulted him as one of the most famous intellects of his time. Envisioning America as an inclusive nation, Douglass dedicated his life to rid America of the scourges of slavery, injustice and racial inequality, establishing himself as a formidable leader in the abolitionist movement of the 1850s. Inception of Slave Trade Slavery in the newly independent United He published a newspaper in Rochester, New York, title “The North Star”. Douglass 's goals were to "abolish slavery in all its forms and aspects, promote the moral and intellectual improvement of the COLORED PEOPLE, and hasten the day of FREEDOM to the Three Millions of our enslaved fellow countrymen" (Americaslibrary, para 1, 2016). Slavery and racism were not the only threat to the existence of Blacks but also to the existence of the entire nation in Douglass’s mind (Prioleau, 2003). Douglass established his status as a political leader while speaking to audiences that included both abolitionists and suffragist (Prioleau, 2003). Douglass’s oratorical style, rhetorical abilities and rational arguments challenged his audiences into reflecting on the cruelty of slavery, an ultimately the support of abolition (Prioleau, 2003). An undeniable force for Douglass was his status as a self-freed slave and literate black man, which made credible evidence of his ability to lead the abolition movement. Equal Rights of 18th

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