There was Once a Slave ...: The Heroic Story of Frederick DouglassJ. Messner, 1966 - 310 pages |
Contents
THE LIGHTNING | 81 |
Jobs in Washington and voting in Rhode Island | 103 |
On two sides of the Atlantic | 119 |
Copyright | |
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Abolitionists American Anna antislavery asked Baltimore began called Captain Auld Charles Sumner colored convention cotton Covey Covey's crowd dark door England eyes face feet Fred Frederick Douglass freedom Freeland Gamaliel Bailey Gerrit Smith Haiti hall hand Harpers Ferry hear heard Helen Pitts Henry Hugh Ingersoll Jack Jack Haley John Brown Kansas knew labor land laughed leaned Lincoln listened living looked Lucy master Miss Amelia morning mother moved Negro never nigger night O'Connell paper President Robert Peel Rochester Sandy Secretary shook his head shoulders shouted silent slave slaveholders slavery smiled South spoke stared stood stopped street talked Theodore Parker thing thought tion told took trees turned United voice waiting walked wanted Washington watched Wendell Phillips wife William Freeland William Lloyd Garrison woman words York young