Frederick Douglass Motivation Essay

862 Words4 Pages

Frederick Douglass
Lucas Ervin
7B
2-23-17

“Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will”-Frederick Douglass. This quote shows how Frederick was determined to fix the problem of slavery. He was a very determined man who instead of saying he is going to fix a problem, he gets up and fixes it. That trait made him very motivational because of how he set an example of how you need to work to achieve something. Frederick Douglass escaped slavery at a young age ,and did this even though he was at the highest of risks. When Frederick escaped slavery, he did not just use his freedom for himself. He fought under the most dangerous of times to free all slaves. He jeopardized his freedom to help save …show more content…

Frederick was born into slavery in Talbot County, Maryland. He was born in February of 1818 in a small log cabin (bio.com).When Frederick was 10 years old, his mother died. Frederick had no father figure in his life, so all he had was his mother, a necessary presence in his life (bio.com). Frederick rarely ever saw his mother because she lived on another plantation and the times they saw each other, Frederick was too young to remember (nps.gov). Frederick escaped slavery at age 20. He escaped when he was a body slave for a plantation owner. He was considered lucky because he did not have to work on the plantation, but he still was not free (docsouth.unc.edu). Overall, his family life was not an easy deal for his younger …show more content…

At the age of twenty, he escaped slavery and worked as a newspaper editor. He edited newspapers over the course of 16 years. He edited for newspapers such as, The North Star, and The Douglass Monthly (docsouth.unc.edu). One of the newspapers that he edited, The North Star, one of four papers edited by Frederick, was dedicated to abolitionism and social reform. Rochester, New York’s Douglass' Monthly ran from 1858-1863. This paper was a stand to slavery and supported abolition on equality between blacks and whites (rmc.library.cornell.edu). In his address to the Women’s Loyal League, he reminded his audience that slavery was the cause of the war, and that its abolition could not be complete until the former slaves had been free from all restrictions (blackpast.org). He was a U.S. minister and consul general to Haiti in the U.S. government (blackpast.org).Overall, Frederick did many things to move people to end the fight of slavery by not just saying people should end slavery but doing it