%images;]> LCRBMRP-T1212The story of Frederick Douglass : with quotations, : by Laura E. Wilkes.: a machine-readable transcription. Collection: African-American Pamphlets from the Daniel A. P. Murray Collection, 1820-1920; American Memory, Library of Congress. Selected and converted.American Memory, Library of Congress.

Washington, 1994.

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00-000721Daniel Murray Pamphlet Collection, 1860-1920, Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress. Copyright status not determined.
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THE STORY OFFREDERICK DOUGLASS.BY LAURA E. WILKES.

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THE STORY OFFREDERICK DOUGLASSWITH QUOTATIONS,BY LAURA E. WILKES,Teacher in the Primary Schools, Washington, D.C.COPYRIGHTED NOVEMBER, 1899.WASHINGTON, D. C.Printed at The Howard University.1899.

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O, Douglass! thou hast passed beyond the shore,But still thy voice is ringing o'er the gale.Thou'st taught thy race how high her hopes may soar,And bade her seek the heights, nor faint nor fail.DUNBAR.

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PREFACE.I have prepared this little book for the young folks of the race, because I believe the life of Frederick Douglass should serve as an inspiration to every schoolboy and girl.

His youthful hardships and deprivations, his efforts to learn reading and writing, his struggles for liberty and his boldness and fearlessness of speech in behalf of freedom for the people of his race all show his strength of character, his undaunted courage.

The ambitious colored youth meets today many prejudices and disheartening conditions which were far greater in the days of this man; and yet he never despaired.

The church, the school, the state offered barriers then, which no longer exist. Yet he surmounted all of these and reached a plane upon which he still stands alone, because of his teuacity and persistency.

He succeeded in the purposes of his life, because he had a never ending faith in the righteousness of his cause and in his ability; for it is ever true that-- "He can who thinks he can."But I do not here intend to portray the character of Frederick Douglass or pay just tribute to the man; that is a task for other times and abler hands than mine.

I have tried simply to tell the narrative of his life as I would "Viva Voce" to a room full of young people of any age; for the incidents of his singing under the window of his mistress for bread, and learning to write in his garret bedroom, with an inverted barrel for a desk, will appeal to tiny tots as well as to those of maturer years.

If I succeed in awakening the interest and stimulating the minds of those for whom the book is intended to farther research along this line; if one fact told in the following pages will renew the vigor of some boy, disheartened, I have done all I wished to do and am content. L.E. Wilkes.

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THE STORY OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS.

On or about the 14th of February, 1817, on a large plantation down on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, there was born a little Negro slave boy. This child, whom we shall henceforth know as Frederick Douglass, lived with his old grandmother, his mother being hired out by her master. The grandmother was a fisherwoman of much note, she was also skilled in the manufacture of fish nets and was famous for her success in the planting of sweet potatoes. She was treated with more than ordinary respect by all who knew her.

Of the early childhood of Douglass there is little to tell. While in his grandmother Betsy's care he lived in a little cabin which was several miles away from those of the other slaves, as the old lady had been excused from labor on account of her great age. The log hut was bare enough; it was neither painted nor whitewashed; it contained two rooms, one above the other--that above with a floor made of fence rails, which did double duty as floor and bed; that below windowless, with its floor of cold brown clay, and earth-and-straw chimney. The stairway was a ladder. There was little furniture--a table, a stool or two, no stove, but instead a wide chimney place in which 00075sweet potatoes were roasted and corn pone and johnny cake baked

In such a home as this young Federick spent the first six years of his life with none of the diversions considered necessary for the happiness of children. In the summer there were the birds to listen to and the squirrels to watch as they gathered nuts for the long cold winter; or there was fishing time in the Choptank River when his grandmother measured her strong arm with the best of the men in the catching of shad and herring. Another thing the little fellow found interesting was to draw water from the deep old-fashioned well so full of mystery to him and to gaze into its depths at the reflection of the clear blue sky with the woolly white clouds sailing by like great birds. He liked to muse on the hillside and watch the water fall over the wheel of the old mill when the people brought their corn to be ground by Mr. Lee, the miller, and to drop his line with its hook of bent pin, into the mill-pond for the fish that he never caught.

All of these things came to an end when between the ages of six and seven he was carried to the home plantation of his master, Col. Anthony, a large land owner on the banks of the Wye River. The trip of 12 miles was all made on foot by the grandmother who carried little Frederick in her arms when he grew too tired to walk. Here he met a brother and two sisters--Perry, Sarah, and Elizabeth--of whom he had heard much, but appreciated not their relationship to him.

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Life now took on a great change. There was no grandmother on whose lap he might cry out his childish woes and have them soothed away by her kindly hands. Instead there was Aunt Kate, who having been given unusual authority by her master, was very cruel and unkind to the plantation young folks who were all under her care. She gave them very little to eat and young Douglass often fought for crumbs and other fragments of food with Nep, the watch-dog. To dip his bread into the water in which a bit bacon had been boiled was a great luxury, while a bit of rusty bacon rind was the greatest of delicacies. Too young to work in the fields, he had to drive the cows up at sunset, keep the front yard clean, and go small errands for his young mistress. This lady was very kind to him and often gave him bread and even butter from her own table. He learned a trick of singing under her window when very hungry; she soon understood what was expected of her and accordingly remunerated the singer with food, which was often a Maryland biscuit, and thus he formed a liking for that delicacy which he never outgrew.

There was no difference between his life and that of the other slave boys and girls. He, like them, had neither shoes nor stocking, jackets nor trousers. Two coarse tow lined shirts was all that was given for the whole year, and if these, were worn out before allowance day came, the little one went naked until that time came again. There were no beds; the children slept in the corners, 00097often near the chimney in order to keep warm only adults were given a blanket, and that was a rough one. Douglass slept in a little closet; he shared the children's regular diet, which was a large trough of corn meal mush from which all ate at once, each scooping out his share with an oyster shell or a piece of shingle. Of course the one who could eat most quickly and was the strongest got the lion's share. Before he was twelve years old he went to Baltimore. Great were the preparations made for his most eventful trip. The best part of three days he spent in the creek, for he had been promised a pair of pants--his first--on this condition, however, that he made himself exceedingly clean. The warning had the desired result. He received the trousers and became so excited that he could not sleep for fear of being left.

Having reached the city he entered the family of a relative of his master. Here his duty was to attend the wants of a little boy about his own age. This marks an epoch in the life of our hero, for he was given a comfortable room to sleep in and a plenty of good food to eat.

His new mistress, Mrs. Auld, unused to slaves, manifested much interest in him, and even allowed him to stand at her knee and learn his letters with her little son Thomas. She was pleased with his progress that she told her husband, who became angry and requested her to stop teaching the little nigger at once, which she did. Young Douglass had, however, become ambitious, and though Mrs. Auld gave him no more lessons, it was out 00108of the question to expect him to give up trying to learn. He earned a few dimes blacking boots, and with these he bought the "Columbian Orator," a book he had heard some white schoolboys mention. These boys had given him, also, much assistance in learning how to spell.

Although at this time he was still very young, he had already begun to feel a growing discontent at being a slave and two selections contained in the Orator had much to do with increasing his dissatisfaction. These were "A Dialogue between the Master and his Slave," in which the slave argued so well that he was emancipated; and the great English orator Sheridan's speech on "Catholic Emancipation."

For seven years he remained in Baltimore. During this time he became acquainted with a pious old man known as Uncle Lawson, this poor slave was a person of much religious devotion and through his influence Douglass' thoughts were centered on his Creator, and once in this frame of mind he became more cheerful. Little Thomas Auld had meantime become a great schoolboy and no longer needed his care. He was therefore given work in the shipyard of Mr. Hugh Auld, and in this work he learned to write in the most novel way by copying the letters "L." "S."L.A." and "S.A.;" which meant Larboard, Starboard, Larboard-aft and Starboard-aft and were to be found on the sides of vessels. Encouraged by his success he began copying the italics in Webster's Spelling Book, and ended up by taking possession of some 00119finished copy books of Thomas Auld which had been most carefully put away as treasures by the latter's mother. These Douglass used as tracing books. Night after night when his hard day's work was ended, in a bare little garret bedroom he worked by the light of a tallow candle with an old barrel for a desk.

Through many changes, brought about by the death of his old master, Douglass found himself at St. Michaels, Md., in 1833, with a new master and mistress.

Until Christmas Day, 1834, he was hired to a very cruel man named Covey, who starved and beat him unmercifully. Douglass strong resentment at the indignities put upon him by this man gave him the determination to resist Covey's second attempt to whip him. This he did with so much physical force that the latter was absolutely beaten and badly hurt. The moral effect of his victory upon the slave lad was that from the hour of his conquest he was in mind a free man. The next man who hired him was very kind. On his farm he did very hard work as a field hand. Here he opened a Sunday School and had about 30 pupils, when it was broken up by the masters of the members. A second school was opened and secretly conducted in the woods.

In the beginning of the year 1836 Douglass made a vow that before its close he would make an effort to free himself. This determination he made known to five of his friends who were likewise inclined, and they began to make arrangements to that end. Passes were written, 001210food prepared and clothing packed. The plan was to go down the river in an open boat and around up the bay toward Delaware. The plot was betrayed, however, on the very day fixed for departing, by one of the five who had his courage lessened by a Friday night's dream. The young men were carried to jail and a search was made for the passes which Douglass had written. These were not found, for Douglass had thrown his into the fire and the others had eaten theirs on the road. They were imprisoned at Easton, but all were set free after a few months except Douglass, for it was generally understood that he had originated the plan. So he was detained much longer with the threat of being sent South. This did not happen, for he was finally sent again to Baltimore to learn a trade, with the promise that he should be free at the age of 25.

During the Spring and Summer of 1836 he worked at calking in the shipyard of Mr. Gardiner. Here he was nearly killed by the poor white apprentices who objected to working with a Negro. These things--contact with free men of his own race and the fact that he was forced to hand over each Saturday night all that he had earned during the week to a white man--served to make him more discontented with slavery. He sought and was at first refused the privilege of hiring his own time. It was afterward given him only to be taken away within a few months. Although disappointed in this venture, which he had intended should be a step nearer freedom, he was not 001311despondent, but determined to make another effort to secure his heart's desire.

Accordingly on the 3rd of September, 1838, dressed in a sailor's outfit borrowed from a sailor friend, with a sailor's passport in his pocket, and a little money furnished by the woman who afterward became his wife, he boarded a moving train in Baltimore, in order to avoid the showing of free papers of which he had none, answering the usual questions and measuring, all of which were necessary when a colored person attempted to buy a railroad ticket. While on the train he was several times exposed to the view of those who knew him, but so complete was his disguise that he reached New York City twenty-four hours after starting, without accident. Fearing to remain in New York, where there was every danger of being discovered and returned to slavery, and discouraged by his failure to secure work, he left in a few days for New Bedford, Mass., accompanied by his wife, who, being a free woman had left Baltimore immediately after his departure and had joined him in New York, where they were married.

In New Bedford he was variously employed as charboy, at work in an oil refinery, and in a brass foundry; in this latter position the work was very hard, but so great was his desire for knowledge that often while at work over a furnace hot enough to keep metals in a liquid state, he would nail a newspaper to the post before him and read as he worked.

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The first Anti-Slavery Convention he attended was in Nantucket, in 1841. Here he met Wm. Lloyd Garrison, who was then a young man, and afterward became famous as an abolitionist. Mr. Douglass was introduced to the public in this meeting by W C. Coffin, another noted abolitionist, and made a speech which was so impressive that he was invited to and became an agent of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society. With other members of the organization it now became his duty to go about in the New England States and protest against slavery. Sometimes he suffered many indignities; again he was treated with deference and respect. In Grafton, N. H., he was refused the use of any hall or church in which to assemble an audience. So great was his determination to speak in that town, in spite of this opposition, that he borrowed a dinner bell from the hotel and went through the streets crying out, "Notice! Frederick Douglass, recently a salve, will lecture on American Slavery, on the common, this evening. Those who would like to hear the working of slavery by one the of the slaves are respectfully invited to attend." He had a crowd that evening and afterward there was no trouble in the effort to secure an assembly hall in Grafton. He was made to ride in Jim Crow cars. On one occasion, when avoiding these cars, he was beaten by the brakeman. On another, when refusing to take second-class fare on a first-class ticket, the conductor and others, in the attempt to move him, brought away also a part of the seat, to which he clung most firmly. While 001513lecturing in Indiana he was beset by a mob who threw bad eggs at him and his associates, and used such personal violence that Douglass was left with a broken hand and unconscious.

All of this public speaking was attended with great danger. There was every possibility of being captured and returned to slavery, and there was also the liability of death at the hands of Southerners or their sympathizers. Consequently, he decided to leave America and become a refugee in England about the year 1844.

While in Great Britian he was associated with such kindred spirits as John Bright, Peel, O'Connell, Disraeli, and many other famous statesmen. Affinity with such persons served to imbue him with a larger love for freedom. Unlimited opportunities were given him for addressing the public --one being at the World's Temperance Convention, held in Covent Garden, London. While abroad the sum of 150 pounds sterling was collected by English Friends and sent to Hugh Auld as purchase money and thus Frederick Douglass became literally a free man. After remaining away nearly two years, he returned to America despite the protest of friends on the other side of the water and again took up active work for the liberation of slaves. Discouraged in the effort to edit an Anti-Slavery paper in Boston, he moved to Rochester, New York, and there, in the Fall of 1847, issued the North Star, afterward known as Frederick Douglass' paper. In the early struggle for the existence 001614of the journal, Mr. Douglass received material aid from such men as Gerrit Smith, Chief Justice Chase, Wm. H. Seward, and Charles Sumner.

He made another visit to England in 1859, due to fear of arrest and implication of complicity in the John Brown raid at Harpers Ferry, W. Va. He returned to America as soon as the threatened danger was past, with new zeal to take up his work again.

During the civil war which soon followed this raid, Mr. Douglass was active in the raising of the 54th Massachusetts regiment of colored troops, whose magnificent work under colonel Shaw at Fort Wagner, South Carolina, can never be forgotten. He also visited President Lincoln and Secretary of War Stanton, in the hope of securing commissions for colored men, who until then had been enlisted only as privates. In this he was unsuccessful, though the Secretary promised him a position as Adjutant to General Thomas, then in the Mississippi Valley. He waited for it anxiously, but the papers never came.

When the war ended, in 1865, and the slaves were emancipated, Mr. Douglass took up a new line of work as a public lecturer. His favorite topic was "Self Made Men;" in this he was very successful. His high sense of honor and right impelled him to decline to follow the advice of many friends to go South and live in a thickly populated Negro district, in order to come to Congress through their vote. In the early 70's he took up a residence in Washington and became editor-in-chief of a 001715race paper--The New National Era. The promised support not being given, he afterward bought this paper and gave over the management of the same to his two sons, Lewis and Frederick.

Mr. Douglass became president of the Freeman's Bank, an institution in which the recently emancipated slaves all over the country were encouraged to deposit their earnings, and in vindication of his fair name, let it be understood that he lost no time in ascertaining the true condition of the bank, and this done, he endeavored at once to restore things to their proper condition, and to meet as far as possible, the honest demands of the depositors. In this he was thwarted by the directors and other of the bank.

In June, 1871, he made an address at Arlington on the occasion of dedicating the monument to the unknown dead. He also made the address at the unveiling of the Lincoln Monument in Lincoln Park, Washington, D.C.

On the death of Vice-President Wilson, he was one of those appointed to accompany the body to Boston. He was made Marshal of the District of Columbia, by President Hayes, in 1877. Before this time he served in the Legislature for the Government of the District, now replaced by a board of three Commissioners. Mr. Douglass served also on a Commission sent by President Grant to San Domingo to consider the annexation of that island with the United States. Through the appointment of President Garfield he held the position of Recorder of 001816Deeds for nearly five years. Until then no colored man had received this office. Since that time it has always been given to a member of Mr. Douglass' race.

In 1886 Mr. Douglass, having previously married a second time, made the third and last trip to Europe, accompanied by his wife, a lady of the Caucasian race. This trip included many old and renowned cities in the southern part of the continent, and even extended to Egypt.

In 1886 he was appointed to his last public office by President Harrison, as United States Minister to Hayti. As if to show her great confidence and esteem in him, Hayti made him her representative to the World's Fair in Chicago, in 1893. The appreciation of this compliment Mr. Douglass showed by his efforts to place the litter republic on a level with her sister governments at this mammoth exhibition of the World's progress.

On the 20th of February, 1895, the life of this grand man came suddenly to an end at Cedar Hill in Anacostia, D.C., shortly after reaching home from a meeting of the National Council of Women. There was neither pain nor suffering. Funeral services were conducted in the Metropolitan A. M. E. Church at Washington, D.C. It is estimated that upward of 10,000 people of both races viewed the remains as they lay in state in this church he loved so well, while well 3,000 gained admission to the services. He was buried in Mt. Hope Cemetery at Rochester, N. Y.

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Long and lasting will be the influence of Frederick Douglass. His life is a sublime inspiration to his race. As an orator he has no equal--forcible, strong and true in his utterances, full of quiet and gentle humor--one never tired of hearing him. He always had something to say and was a master hand at saying it. Personally he had a magnetic force which drew all to him--of noble bearing, a physique of handsome proportions, crowned by a glorious head of silvery-white hair. His kindly voice and warm hand grasp dispersed the fears of the most timid at once. He was a believer in the righteousness of woman's suffrage and lifted up his voice many times in a struggle for woman's rights. He was a lover of little children and was passionately fond of animals. He never whipped his horses and his voice was sufficient to calm them, no matter how frightened they were. He loved vocal and instrumental music, had a magnificent voice for singing, and was a great admirer of the violin, which he often played.

A monument to the memory of Mr. Douglass was unveiled in one of the public squares of Rochester, N.Y., on June 6th, 1899. The Governor of the State, Hon. Theodore Roosevelt, made the address. Over thirty thousand strangers visited the city on this occasion. A singular incident is that until this time Rochester had but one monument, that of the great Emancipator, Lincoln.

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QUOTATIONSFROM THEAUTOBIOGRAPHY OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS.

1. Conscience cannot stand much violence; once thoroughly injured, who is he who can repair the damage? It must stand unharmed or it does not stand at all.

2. Freedom of choice is the essence of accountability.

3. A man without force is without the essential dignity of humanity.

4. Human nature is so constructed that it cannot honor a helpless man, though it can pity him; and even this it cannot do long if signs of power do not arise.

5. You may hurl a man so low beneath the level of his kind that he loses all just ideas of his natural position; but elevate him a little and the clear conception of right rises to light and leads him onward.

6. Greatness does not come on flowery beds of ease to any people.

7. No people to whom liberty is given can hold it as firmly and wear it as grandly as those who wrench their liberty from the iron hand of the tyrant.

8. You cannot make an empty sack stand on end.

9. A race which cannot save its earnings, which spends all it makes and goes in debt when it is sick, can never rise in the scale of civilization, no matter under what laws it may chance to be.

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10. With money and prosperity come the means of knowledge and power.

11. A man's character always takes its hue more or less from the color of things around him.

12. I never saw much use of fighting where there was no reasonable probability of whipping anybody.

13. It is not a bad thing to have individuals or nations do right though they do so from selfish motives.

14. Music is feeling that you hear.

15. Every dollar you lay up represents one day's independence, one day of rest, and security in the future.

16. The laws which determine the destinies of individuals and nations are impartial.

17. No power beneath the sky can make an ignorant people prosperous or a licentious people happy.

18. Of all consciences to deal with let me have those that have not been seared and bewildered by the perplexities of life.

19. To make a man a slave, is to rob him of moral responsibility.

20. When a slave cannot be flogged he is more than half free.

21. If there be one crevice through which a single drop can fall, it will certainly rust off the slave's chain.

22. We need more to learn how to make a good living than to learn Latin or Greek.

23. A war undertaken and brazenly carried on for the perpetual enslavement of colored men, calls logically and loudly for colored men to help suppress it.

24. Remember, that in a contest with oppression the Almighty has no attribute which can take side with the oppressor.

25. Truth is proper and beautiful at all times and in all places, and it is never in any case more proper and beautiful than when one is speaking of a great public man whose example is likely to 0022be commended for honor and imitation long after his departure to the solemn shades.N.B.--From speech on unveiling of Lincoln monument.

26. Whatever else in the world may be partial, unjust and uncertain--time, time, is impartial, just and certain in its action.

27. The honest and comprehensive statesman clearly discerning the needs of his country and earnestly endeavoring to do his whole duty, though covered and blistered with reproaches, may safely leave his course to the silent judgment of time.

28. The emancipation of our brothers in the West Indies comes home to us and stirs our hearts and fills our souls with those grateful sentiments which link mankind in a common brotherhood.

N.B.--Upon the celebration of Emancipation of the British West Indies, at Elmira, N.Y., 1880.

29. Human liberty excludes all idea of home and abroad. It is universal and spurns localization. It is bounded by no geographical lines and knows no national limitations. Like the glorious sun of the heavens its light shines for all.

30. The cause of human liberty is one the world over.

31. Resistance to slavery and the extension of slavery invited and provoked secession and war to perpetuate and extend the slave system.

32. It is a great thing to have the supreme law of the land on the side of justice and liberty.

33. The fact that we have endured wrongs and hardships which would have destroyed any other race, and that we have increased in numbers and in public consideration, ought to strengthen our faith in ourselves and our future.

34. I would not have you listen to the nonsense that, no people can succeed in life among a people by whom they have been despised and oppressed.

35. Neither we nor any other people will ever be respected until we respect ourselves, and will never respect ourselves until we have the means to live respectably.

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36. If the time shall ever come when we shall possess in the colored people of the United States a class of men noted for enterprise, industry, economy, and success, we shall no longer have any trouble in the matter of political and civil rights.

37. The habit of roaming from place to place in pursuit of better conditions of existence is not a good one.

38. A man should never leave his home for a new one until he has earnestly endeavored to make his immediate surroundings accord with his wishes.

39. No people ever did much for themselves or for the world without the sense and inspiration of native land, of a fixed home, of a familiar neighborhood and common associations.

40. Notwithstanding the great and all abounding darkness of our social past, nothwithstanding the clouds that still overhang us in moral and social skies, and the defects inherited from a bygone condition of servitude,it is the faith of my soul that a brighter and better day will yet come.

41. The conditions of success are universal and unchangeable.

42. The lesson of all ages is: that a wrong done to one man is a wrong done to all men.

43. I am Republican and am likely to remain a Republican: but I was never such a partisan that I could not commend a noble action performed by any man of whatever party or sect.

44. The heart beats louder and the soul hears quicker in silence and solitude.

45. A man's troubles are always half disposed of when he finds endurance the only alternative.