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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page consideration of this important historical figure. This paper addresses how education was his ticket to freedom. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPdougSlvCruel.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
one of the most contradictory times in American history. Born a slave, Douglass ultimately found freedom and the many benefits that come with it. Douglass owed his freedom
to the abolitionist movement. The abolitionist movement was composed of men and women, blacks and whites, that believed that that the institution of slavery was something that was unacceptable
under the American premises of freedom and equality. Not only did these individuals have this common belief, they were willing to take whatever means was necessary to help slaves
find freedom. To Douglass, the abolitionist movement was not only a validation of the inner feelings that he already held but it provided a means through which to act
on those feelings, a means to reach out and claim the most precious thing known to human beings, the means to claim his own freedom and to help other slaves
claim theirs. Douglass, of course, is arguably one of the most visible and influential characters of the nineteenth century. An escaped slave,
Douglass quickly made a name for himself speaking out against the wrongs of slavery. He had learned to read while still a slave and, once he had escaped, carefully
honed that skill along with his oratorical and writing skills for use as a tool in the abolitionist movement (Mieder, 2001). The emotions and sentiments which were pent up
inside Frederick Douglass led to his escape from slavery as well as his accomplishments as one of the most notable black writers and speakers of all time (Mieder, 2001).
One of the many stories Douglass told of slavery was the story of his grandmothers death. The grandmothers life was in
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