The Grio: Frederick Douglass: The visionary who redefined freedom and Black liberation
Frederick Douglass wrote that teaching a man how to read makes him forever unfit for slavery. As civil war loomed, he aligned first with the Liberty Party, then threw weight behind the Republicans, ...
c-span: Lesson Plan: Book That Shaped America - "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass"
Log-in to bookmark & organize content - it's free! This video offers an overview of the "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass" which was published in 1845, details his early life as a slave and ...
Lesson Plan: Book That Shaped America - "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass"
Steve Adubato and his Co-Host and Executive Producer Jacqui Tricarico are joined by Kenneth B. Morris, Jr., Frederick Douglass' great-great-great grandson and Co-Founder and President of Frederick ...
Frederick Douglass became the leading spokesman of his time for the abolition of slavery and for racial equality. Douglass was born in February of 1818 in Maryland. He was the son of a slave but spent ...
WBAL-TV: Frederick Douglass credits Baltimore's Point Boys with helping him learn to read
Frederick Douglass credits Baltimore's Point Boys with helping him learn to read
In a striking new portrait of the great anti-slavery campaigner and former slave Frederick Douglass, the abolitionist stares ahead defiantly, sure of himself and his cause. The portrait is being ...
The words Ms., Mrs., and Miss are all titles used to address women formally (e.g., at the start of an email). Which one you should use depends on the age and marital status of the woman, as well as on her own preference about how she should be addressed. Ms. (pronounced [miz]) is a neutral option that doesn’t indicate any particular marital status. You can use it for any adult woman. Mrs ...