Frederick Douglass L-O-' ....:~ ,V
,-a.cu!,~~ on "J'ul'i ll.\ 1 2D_\3 lcia't J:\«- \ ,"'c.1/v-. ~"''-'~/ r,'\~ IN\ ""'- V v,- J, •.:, ¼ ) led hair, or gold, or pearls, or ~'i •$ ~ Qp~ (which becometh women pro Frederick Douglass L-o-' ....:~ ,V:, I with good works. The word in 1818-1895 ~c.. C.-,.\~~ ed "professing," would be more preaching godliness, or enjoin :ods, or conducting public war Frederick Douglass was born a slave in 1818 on a farm in Maryland. His mother, bing the duty of female minis an enslaved black woman named Harriet Bailey, was sent back lo lhe fields soon pparel, the aposlie proceeds to afler his birth, and he spent his early childhood with his grandmother Betsey Bailey. 1roprietics which probably pre- His father was a while man whose identity Douglass never learned; possibly he was 1esian church, similar to those Aaron Anthony, the plantation overseer who owned his mother, or Edward Lloyd, :proved among the Corinthian the landowner Anthony worked for. , "Let the women LEARN in si At the age of six Frederick was taken from his grandmother to serve as a com ection; but I suffer not a woman urp authority over the man, but panion, first, to one of Lloyd's young sons, and then, in Baltimore, to the young son 1rquietness. Herc again it is evi- of Anthony's daughler's brother-in-law, Hugh Auld. Auld's wife Sophia, unaccus 1en, of whom he was speaking, tomed to managing slaves, treated Frederick very well at first and began to teach to learn in silence, which could him to read, until her husband put a stop to it (see our first set of excerpts, from public ministrations to others.
[Show full text]