Frederick Douglass eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 78 pages of information about Frederick Douglass.

Frederick Douglass eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 78 pages of information about Frederick Douglass.

Among the most noteworthy of Douglass’s later addresses were the oration at the unveiling of the Freedmen’s Monument to Abraham Lincoln in Washington in 1876, which may be found in his Life and Times; the address on Decoration Day, New York, 1878; his eulogy on Wendell Phillips, printed in Austin’s Life and Times of Wendell Phillips; and the speech on the death of Garrison, June, 1879.  He lectured in the Parker Fraternity Course in Boston, delivered numerous addresses to gatherings of colored men, spoke at public dinners and woman suffrage meetings, and retained his hold upon the interest of the public down to the very day of his death.

XII.

With the full enfranchisement of his people, Douglass entered upon what may be called the third epoch of his career, that of fruition.  Not every worthy life receives its reward in this world; but Douglass, having fought the good fight, was now singled out, by virtue of his prominence, for various honors and emoluments at the hands of the public.  He was urged by many friends to take up his residence in some Southern district and run for Congress; but from modesty or some doubt of his fitness—­which one would think he need not have felt—­and the consideration that his people needed an advocate at the North to keep alive there the friendship and zeal for liberty that had accomplished so much for his race, he did not adopt the suggestion.

In 1860 [1870] Douglass moved to Washington, and began [took over] the publication of the New National Era, a weekly paper devoted to the interests of the colored race.  The venture did not receive the support hoped for; and the paper was turned over to Douglass’s two [oldest] sons, Lewis and Frederick, and was finally abandoned [in 1874], Douglass having sunk about ten thousand dollars in the enterprise.  Later newspapers for circulation among the colored people have proved more successful; and it ought to be a matter of interest that the race which thirty years ago could not support one publication, edited by its most prominent man, now maintains several hundred newspapers which make their appearance regularly.

In 1871 Douglass was elected president of the Freedmans Bank.  This ill-starred venture was then apparently in the full tide of prosperity, and promised to be a great lever in the uplifting of the submerged race.  Douglass, soon after his election as president, discovered the insolvency of the institution, and insisted that it be closed up.  The negro was in the hands of his friends, and was destined to suffer for their mistakes as well as his own.

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Frederick Douglass from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.