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Frederick Douglass

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About This Book

The biography traces the subject's journey from enslavement through escape and self-education to national prominence, recounting plantation life, apprenticeship, flight to the North and refuge in England, and emergence as an eloquent abolitionist speaker and organizer. It examines his positions on colonization, the Underground Railroad, and the Fugitive Slave Law, chronicles wartime advocacy for the enlistment of Black troops, and follows his efforts during Reconstruction and later public honors, situating personal episodes within the wider political and social debates over emancipation, citizenship, and the long struggle to secure civil rights.

About the Author

Washington, Booker T. portrait

Booker T. Washington

Booker T. Washington (1856-1915) was an influential African American educator, author, and orator. Born into slavery, he rose to prominence as the founder of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, where he advocated for vocational education for African Americans. Washington is best known for his autobiography, "Up from Slavery," which details his experiences and philosophy on self-help and racial uplift. His work emphasized the importance of education and hard work as means to achieve social and economic progress. Throughout his life, he wrote extensively on issues of race and education, contributing significantly to the discourse on African American advancement in the post-Civil War United States.

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