Slavery: Narrative Of The Life Of Fredrick Douglass

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In 1619 the first African slaves stepped foot on North American soil, they were called “20 and Odd “. This would cause a revolution and uproar for 300 hundred years to come. This pandemonium was called slavery; slavery is thought to be the brutal, harsh and controlling punishment for any persons that were of the African descent. Some believed that slavery was justifiable because it seemed to be supported by passages in the Bible. While blacks were not thought to be the only ones being controlled and abused physically, they were proven to have been treated the worse. In the diary, titled “Narrative of the Life of Fredrick Douglass” the author born as Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey described life while being a slave, and after he had escaped …show more content…

While it was perceived that all slaves were treated good, suggested that they were content with being slaves, and that all slaves were uneducated. While Douglass himself autobiography is still living proof of what really happened those 300 hundred years African- American people were enslaved, beaten, and separated from their families. Furthermore, Douglass is confirming in his autobiography on real accounts the truth behind all of these lies showed in the movie, entitled Gone with the Wind. Douglass autobiography also suggests that there were slavery in the north and south was for the most part a tad bit different. Suggesting that, the south required a lot of agricultural work and the north was not for the most part did not. Douglass did not one time pick cotton not even in his childhood because he was a house slave down south and cotton does not grow up north. Douglass escape is something that was apparent throughout the autobiography that he wanted since a young age. While slavery was a long process throughout the lives of many African-Americans, where many lives were taken, families were separated, and many died uneducated; abolitionist like Fredrick Douglass changed the way for slaves by becoming educated and helping writing the Emancipation Proclamation in

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