Note: This post quotes from Frederick Douglass’s memoir, where he recounts racist treatment that he received from various white men. Although he quotes their offensive language, this post has censored out the racial slurs, indicating only by brackets that the unfortunate “N-word” was the word used in the original quotations.
Before the Civil War, a young slave secretly took a great risk by learning how to read ...
Frederick Douglass in the 1860s, long after his being held as a slave
Frederick Douglass would later recount this story in a famous memoir
After he had escaped to the North,
Frederick Douglass would later write a memoir. It was simply entitled
“Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave (Written By Himself).” This memoir was first published in 1845. In it, he describes his experiences as a slave, writing the most influential account ever given about
American slavery. Most relevantly for our present subject, he recounts his secret undertaking to learn how to read, while under the domination of White Southerners. The writing speaks so well for itself that very little commentary will be needed to dramatize it, or put it into perspective.
Original edition of this memoir