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  1. Frederick Douglass Jr. (1842–1892) was the son of abolitionist Frederick Douglass and an early resident of Barry Farm–Hillsdale. During the Civil War, Douglass Jr. helped recruit African American troops for the Union Army. In the 1870s, Douglass Jr., his brother Lewis, and their father published the

  2. He served for two years and served again from 1928 until 1953. Haley Douglass was survived by two children, a daughter Jean M. Douglass and a son, Joseph A. Douglass. Both children spent their summers in Highland Beach. Mayor Haley Douglass on the town pier with Norma Murray Jorgensen and residents and guests, ca. 1940s.

  3. ABOUT. Kenneth B. Morris, Jr. descends from two of the most influential names in American history: he is the great-great-great-grandson of Frederick Douglass and the great-great-grandson of Booker T. Washington. Morris continues his family’s legacy of anti-slavery and educational work as cofounder and president of the Frederick Douglass ...

  4. Frederick Douglass Jr. (March 3, 1842 - July 26, 1892) was the second son of Frederick Douglass and his wife Anna Murray Douglass. Born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, he was an abolitionist, essayist, newspaper editor, and an official recruiter of colored soldiers for the United States Union Army during the American Civil War. Frederick Jr. was the third eldest of five children born to the ...

  5. Frederick Douglass, Jr. was born on March 3, 1842 before the Douglass family moved to Lynn, Massachusetts. Charles Remond Douglass was born on October 21, 1844 in Lynn. Annie Douglass was born on March 22, 1849 in Rochester, New York; she died at the age of 10 years old.

  6. Frederick Douglass was unquestionably the foremost black American of the nineteenth century. The extraordinary life of this former slave turned abolitionist orator, newspaper editor, social reformer, race leader, and Republican party advocate has inspired many biographies over the years. This, however, is the first full-scale study of the origins, contours, development, and significance of ...

  7. Writing his autobiography, ‘Frederick Douglass Jr. in brief from 1842-1890', Frederick Jr. bore witness to a life lived in terrible hardship. Across his published essays, he refused to succumb to the injustices of white racist hate by denouncing ‘Southern terrorism.’ He protested against a traumatising state of affairs according to which,