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Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass Lesson Plans and Teaching Resources |
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Frederick Douglass was one of the foremost spokesman of the abolitionist movement, which fought to end slavery within the United States in the decades before the Civil War. In 1845 Douglass published his autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written By Himself. Three years later he published his own newspaper, The North Star. Douglass served as an adviser to President Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War and recruited northern blacks for the Union Army. An Introduction to the Slave
Narrative |
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Slave Narratives From
Courage to Freedom: Frederick Douglass's 1845 Autobiography
OUSD
Lesson Plan: Frederick Douglas The Frederick Douglass Papers at the Library of Congress, available on the American Memory Web site, contains approximately 7,400 items (38,000 images) relating to Douglass' life as an escaped slave, abolitionist, editor, orator, and public servant. The papers consist of correspondence, speeches and articles by Douglass and his contemporaries, a draft of his autobiography, financial and legal papers, scrapbooks, and miscellaneous items. Topics include politics, emancipation, racial prejudice, women's suffrage, and prison reform. Included is correspondence with Susan B. Anthony, William Lloyd Garrison, Horace Greeley, Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison, and others. DOUGLASS | Archives of American
Public Address
Documenting the American South (DAS) is an impressive collection of sources by the University of North Carolina on Southern history, literature and culture from the colonial period through the first decades of the 20th century. DAS supplies teachers, students, and researchers with a wide range of titles they can use for reference, studying, teaching, and research. Currently, DAS includes six digitization projects: slave narratives, first-person narratives, Southern literature, Confederate imprints, materials related to the church in the black community, and North Caroliniana. Life and Times of Frederick Douglass Play a Quia-based
vocabulary game based on Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass.
The terms are: 1. Impudent: disrespectful, insolent 2. Obdurate:
1. hardhearted; 2. inflexible 3. Homage: anything done
or given to show reverence 4. Servile: submissive 5.
Expedient: useful for effecting a desired result: efficacious
6. Stratagem: trick or scheme 7. Infernal:
hellish 8. Vestige: a trace, a mark, a sign of something
that once existed but has disappeared 9. Profligate:
1. immoral; 2. wasteful, recklessly extravagant 10. Dissipate:
1. scatter; 2. waste 11. Pernicious: causing great
injury, deadly 12. Myriad: of great number; 2. of a
highly varied nature 13. Exculpate: to free from blame
14. Agency: active force, power 15. Evince:
to indicate, to show plainly Other notable slave narratives: Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl - Electronic text with critical and biographical supplementary materials. Sojurner Truth, The Narrative of Sojurner Truth - Electronic text. Booker T. Washington, Up From Slavery - Electronic text.
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