Skip to content

Frederick Douglass In His Own Words - Livestream with Professor Edward

Photo of Robert Kelleman
Hosted By
Robert K. and Robert K.
Frederick Douglass In His Own Words - Livestream with Professor Edward

Details

Frederick Douglass In His Own Words - History Livestream with Professor Edward

An Online Presentation

On September 3, 1838, Frederick Douglass disguised himself as a sailor and escaped slavery on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. That act of defiance began a life that would reshape the American republic.
This program marks the anniversary of his flight to freedom with an hour of readings from Douglass’s most powerful words. We will hear his thunderous denunciation of hypocrisy in What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? (1852), his searing memories of bondage and self-emancipation, his bold defense of women’s rights at Seneca Falls (1848), his conviction that the ballot is the safeguard of liberty, and his candid reflections on Abraham Lincoln—at once admiring and unsparing.
Douglass’s life was interwoven with the great figures of freedom: his complicated friendship with John Brown, his tribute to Harriet Tubman, and his call for Black men to join the Union Army—his own two sons, Lewis and Charles, among the men who answered. These ties remind us that emancipation was not an abstraction, but a struggle of blood and courage.
Across his long career, Douglass became the conscience of the nation, an editor, statesman, and orator who never wavered in insisting that America live up to its founding ideals. He was among the most photographed Americans of the nineteenth century, shaping not just words but images of freedom. He traveled widely, debated the greatest minds of his time, and bore witness to both the promise and betrayal of Reconstruction.
Douglass (1818–1895) has rightly been called the founder of America’s Second Republic—the rebirth of democracy forged in Civil War, Emancipation, and Reconstruction.
His words remain urgent today, summoning us to finish the unfinished work of freedom. Join us!

Zoom link will be emailed the day of the event.
If you don’t receive it feel free to contact me.
Robert Kelleman
[rkelleman@yahoo.com](mailto:rkelleman@yahoo.com)

Photo of Washington, DC Embassy Events & Museum Meetups group
Washington, DC Embassy Events & Museum Meetups
See more events