Carlisle's Chesapeake

Easton's Frederick Douglass Honor Society

13 min · 9. juli 202113 min
episode Easton's Frederick Douglass Honor Society cover

Beskrivelse

Brenda Wooden, President of the Frederick Douglass Honor Society (FDHS), tells us how the Society began with efforts to erect a statue in the great orator's and emancipator's name on the courthouse lawn of Easton, the county seat of Talbot County where Frederick Douglass was born and spent the first years of his life.  FDHS celebrates their native son with a special day the last Saturday in September.  Past speakers at the yearly festivities include: authors, Celeste Marie Bernier, John Stauffer, David Blight and the great, great, great grandson of Frederick Douglass, Kenneth Morris.

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Alle episoder

17 episoder

episode Ken Morris, Douglass and Washington Descendant Talks about Modern Day Slavery cover

Ken Morris, Douglass and Washington Descendant Talks about Modern Day Slavery

Frederick Douglass began his Statesman years by moving from Rochester, New York to "A" Street on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. after the Civil War in 1872.  Kenneth Morris, his great, great, great grandson talks about  the Douglass home on Cedar Hill in Anacostia where America's famous abolitionist lived with his family until his death.  The home is now under the National Park Service umbrella open to visit.  Douglass' son, Charles built a home for his father in Highland Beach near Annapolis, Maryland.  While his father never could enjoy the view looking across the Chesapeake Bay to Talbot County where he was born, the home can be visited by appointment. Ken Morris descends from two great lines of African Americans: Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington.  Through an organization begun by his mother, Nettie Washington Douglass, he endeavors to continue his families' legacies for bringing justice and education to all.  That organization is the Frederick Douglass Family Initiatives.

4. juli 202157 min
episode Women in the World of Frederick Douglass with Leigh Fought cover

Women in the World of Frederick Douglass with Leigh Fought

Leigh Fought, Ph.D., professor at LeMoyne College in Syracuse, NY, recounts Frederick Douglass's 25 years in Rochester, New York, an area that was known as the "Burned over" District in the 1840's period of America.  A hotbed of religious and social movements, Quakers, Abolitionists, Methodists and Suffragettes gained momentum in this area of Upper State and Central New York which was still considered the Western Frontier. Frederick Douglass moved his family from Lynn, Massachusetts to Rochester during this time.  Dr. Fought describes the encounters he has with segregated schools for his daughter, Rosetta.   She also shows the parallels in the lives of Frederick and his wife Rosetta, a woman who was free when he married her but he was still "owned" by his master, and Nathan Sprague, a runaway slave from Maryland who married Douglass's daughter, Rosetta, a woman who was born free. Douglass during his Rochester period breaks away from William Lloyd Garrison, the leader and his employer of the American Anti-Slavery Society.  He continues to travel extensively on the public speaking circuit to agitate about slavery all the while beginning to publish "The North Star" with the help of his family and several European women.  The Republican Party is coming into being during this Antebellum Period.  During this formative period in Douglass's life, it is a path of moral suasion not adhering to the radical physicality of John Brown that Frederick chooses to change the course of American history.

26. apr. 202155 min
episode Douglass Family Supports Frederick's Freedom Causes by Celeste- Marie Bernier cover

Douglass Family Supports Frederick's Freedom Causes by Celeste- Marie Bernier

Celeste-Marie Bernier, author of "If I Survive" and co-author of "Picturing Frederick Douglass: An Illustrated Biography of the Nineteenth Century's Most Photographed American" with John Stauffer and Zoe Trodd, begins with Frederick Douglass's first trip to the British Isles in 1845.  In Scotland he rails against the religious hypocrisy in a "Send Back the Money Campaign" written on Salisbury crag overlooking Edinburgh. Next Douglass journeys to England where anti-slavery advocates purchase his freedom from the Aulds.  After his manumission, Frederick returns to the United States and moves his family to Rochester, New York from Massachusetts.  Bernier, a world Frederick Douglass scholar, documents the Douglass family collective freedom fighter efforts.  She illustrates how Anna Murray Douglass shepherded slaves through the Underground Railroad to their freedom in Canada burning while raising their children as Frederick continued his anti-slavery speaking engagements to far flung lyceums in the pre-Civil War era. Two years after the Civil War outbreak, Douglass writes "Men of Color, To Arms."  Bernier explains how each of the three Douglass sons  answered their father's clarion call.  She ends with a tribute to daughter, Rosetta Douglass Sprague, who counseled, "Read, reflect and act."

17. feb. 202143 min