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Frederick Douglass begins publication of the anti-slavery newspaper, North Star.
1847 (Dec 3)
Black American abolitionist Frederick Douglass began publication of his own newspaper, the North Star. Douglass, who was formally enslaved, became the era's most well-known Black anti-slavery speaker and writer. Born in Tuckahoe, Maryland, in 1817, Douglass was separated in infancy from his mother and had harsh enslavers as a child. While still very young, Douglass became a house servant in Baltimore, where white playmates taught him to read. His first attempt at escape was thwarted, but in 1838, while working as a ship calker, he managed a successful break from slavery. Further education by anti-slavery groups in the North made Douglass a very lucid speaker and writer. The publication of the North Star was one of the factors that led to Douglass's break with William Lloyd Garrison, the noted white abolitionist and publisher of the Liberator. Garrison saw no need for two major rival anti-slavery publications, but Douglass and other Blacks had become convinced that they must play a more leading role in the abolitionist movement, and that included the printing of a newspaper. In later years, Douglass was appointed to several political and diplomatic posts, including unofficial advisor to presidents Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, marshal of the district of Columbia, recorder of deeds of the district of Columbia, and minister to Haiti. He also served as president of the Freedmen's Bank in 1874.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.