How Did Frederick Douglass Contribute To Education

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During his young years, Douglas believed and sought education as the pathway to freedom, which would lead to economic success and a way out of poverty. He believed education was critical for African Americans to achieve equality. Douglass secretly set up schools for slaves and taught them how to read and write . Thanks to his literacy, he could lecture and write about the evils of slavery and campaign to abolish it. He fought for the rights to vote. He spent two years overseas (Britain & Ireland), where he gave many lectures, building support for his causes. He produced many abolitionist papers including The Frederick Douglass Weekly and North Star. When the literacy test was passed in the late 1800s as one of the requirements to vote,