Saturday, February 24, 2018

Frederick Douglass's Women
Julia Griffiths
 
I provided information about Julia Griffiths’s involvement in Frederick Douglass’s life in my April 13, 2017, post, “Frederick Douglass – Julia Griffiths.” http://authorharoldtitus.blogspot.com/search/label/Frederick%20Douglass?updated-max=2017-09-23T14:48:00-07:00&max-results=20&start=9&by-date=false  I encourage you to review its content before you read this post.
 
***
Great Britain prohibited the institution of slavery in 1834.  Eleven years later a young Negro orator and abolitionist, named Frederick Douglass, went there as a protégé of the Garrisonians and spent nearly two years lecturing before many groups. One of these organizations … was the Women's Anti-Slavery Society of London. Several members of the Society were to play very important parts in Douglass' life. Two of them, especially, identified by Douglass as Mrs. Ellen Richardson and Mrs. Henry Richardson, members of the Society of Friends, were driving forces in collecting enough money (150 pounds or $711.60) to buy him from Captain Hugh Auld of Maryland to whom his ownership had been transferred by his old master, Thomas Auld, the Captain's brother. The two Richardson ladies manumitted him in December of 1846, thus legalizing the freedom he had conferred upon himself by his flight from slavery (Palmer 1).
 
Douglass met another influential, passionate London activist, Julia Griffiths, during his 1845-1847 tour.  She gave him “a valuable collection of books, pamphlets, tracts, and pictures as a starter for educating him in the cause of abolition” (Palmer 1).  Fired with zealous hopes, Douglass returned to American in the spring of 1847 intent upon founding  an anti-slavery newspaper in Rochester, New York. 
 
His dream, he explained, was to fight prejudice among whites and to demonstrate to the African American the potential for equality available "by disproving his inferiority and demonstrating his capacity for a more exalted civilization than slavery and prejudice had assigned him" (Fee 1).
 
William Lloyd Garrison and his followers strongly opposed Douglass’s plan “on the grounds that no such paper was needed and Douglass could do more for the cause as a speaker” (Palmer 1).  It was not until December that Douglass printed his first issue.
 
Early the following year he returned to his family in Lynn, Massachusetts, to prepare to move them to Rochester.  Almost immediately the paper experienced financial difficulties.  In May, Douglass “appealed to his readers from the editorial page: ‘We are reluctantly compelled to call upon you for pecuniary assistance.’  
 
If, as he believed, publishing a newspaper would create white esteem for the black race while encouraging blacks to higher attainment, closing the North Star would be a devastating refutation of all that he believed about himself and about black ability and potential (Fee 1).
 
Douglass mortgaged his home on Alexander Street in Rochester for five hundred dollars to help meet expenses.  … Evidently in response to Douglass' expression of distress and to an earlier letter in which he despaired of publishing a paper,” Julia Griffiths “immediately made a quick round trip to the United States, and returned to stay in 1849, accompanied by her sister, Eliza” (Palmer 1).  Years later, of Julia Douglass wrote:
 
But to no one person was I more indebted for substantial assistance than to Mrs. Julia Griffiths Crofts. She came to my relief when my paper had nearly absorbed all my means, and was heavily in debt, and when I had mortgaged my house to raise money to meet current expenses; and by her energetic and effective management, in a single year enabled me to extend the circulation of my paper from 2,000 to 4,000 copies, pay off the debts and lift the mortgage from my house. Her industry was equal to her devotion. She seemed to rise with every emergency, and her resources appeared inexhaustible (Palmer 2).
 
The English ladies landed in New York early in May, 1849, and Douglass met them. Julia and her sister soon displayed the seriousness of their convictions when they cancelled their registration at the Franklin Hotel on learning that Negroes could not register there.  During their stay in this country the sisters suffered various indignities and criticisms because of their free association with Douglass, a Negro and ex-slave. The worst fracas, probably, in which they were directly involved, occurred on the trip up the Hudson from New York to Albany on their way to Rochester. When Douglass and the two sisters entered the dining room of the LIDA, on Thursday, May 8, 1849, he was ordered to get out, first by the steward, then by the mate, and finally by the captain, who succeeded in convincing Douglass to leave. The sisters, in protest, followed him out of the dining room. As a consequence, the party had nothing to eat until they reached Albany.  Their trials and tribulations did not appear to faze Julia very much, however. To her, these disturbances were all a part of the calculated risk she had undertaken in coming to the United States to fight slavery. To Douglass they were part of his everyday life as a black man in America.  Once in Rochester, Julia plunged with fervor into the work of putting The North Star on its feet financially (Palmer 2).
 
Julia seems quite conscious of her role in assisting Douglass, particularly in her position as guardian of the exchequer. In a letter to Gerrit Smith she says, "Remember, Dear Sir, I am the Banker for the paper -- I know, always, PRECISELY, how the accounts stand -- ." The note of calm assurance evident here and present in most of her correspondence of this period must have been most helpful in sustaining Douglass in his project in the face of his self-doubts, his fears, and the various material obstacles of all kinds that he had to overcome (Palmer 3).
 
Part of her responsibilities lay in getting subscriptions. She wrote continually to such leading figures as Gerrit Smith and William H. Seward. It is a bit amusing to observe with what tenacity she followed each promise of a subscription. She wrote to Seward, for instance, reminding him of his pledge and that he was "receiving his paper constantly," and therefore should send in his five dollar pledge. Upon at least two occasions, Douglass was a bit abashed by Julia's aggressiveness in his behalf. Julia was aware of Douglass' feeling, for she relayed it to Gerrit Smith in a letter, July 10, 1851: "Our friend Frederick is rather disturbed at my having troubled you . . . as he feels . . . claims before you to be too heavy." At another time Douglass acknowledged Julia's interest and energy when he wrote to Smith, "Your letter to my friend Miss Griffiths in which you send 25 dollars to be used in publishing my 4th of July speech makes me uneasy. The zeal of my friend is great and I fear she sometimes seems too urgent in my behalf" (Palmer 4).
 
To improve the financial base of The North Star and of her co-founded, local anti-slavery society, Julia set out to raise a thousand dollars from the sale of a gift book, Autographs for Freedom.  “In the book appeared material of various types from prominent abolitionists and sympathizers over their autographs printed in facsimile.  Jay, Greeley, Whittier, Seward, Stone, Beecher, Willard, and, of course, Gerrit Smith and Frederick Douglass, among others, sent selections for the book” (Palmer 5).   It “sold so well that a second edition was prepared the following year.” 
 
Julia’s anti-slavery Rochester society also sponsored its first annual lecture series, bringing in renowned speakers. Once again, the Society found a large and receptive audience for their message. Colleagues in British antislavery societies provided an important and regular source of funds through bazaars held on behalf of the Rochester Society. By the late 1850s, the annual receipts of the Society surpassed $1,500.
 
The bulk of the money raised by the Society was used in the important task of keeping Frederick Douglass' Paper solvent, but money was also used to help support a school for freedmen in Kansas and for the publication and distribution of anti-slavery literature in Kentucky. The Society played a crucial support role in one stretch of the Underground Railroad, providing small cash gifts directly to fugitive slaves to aid them on the last leg of their escape to Canada. The Society's annual reports for 1855 and 1856 listed 136 fugitives who had passed through Rochester with the Society's help … (Cox 1).
 
Julia did not confine all of her efforts to The North Star, Autographs for Freedom, and the like. When there were items left over from the bazaars, she frequently bundled them up and took them across the lake to Canada, to sell. She was also involved in the underground railroad, an activity she seemed to experience with considerable relish. Douglass described how he "dispatched" Julia to the landing on the Genesee River to arrange for the passage to Canada of three fugitives he was helping at the time. … in escaping, one, William Parker, killed their master. Julia wrote to Gerrit Smith : "We have had great excitement in our house since we parted with you on Friday - on Saturday, THREE FUGITIVES (conducted by a reliable colored man) came to Alexander Street to ask aid … We secreted them for 8 or 9 hours . . . Mr. Loguen and I drove to the LANDING - to make necessary inquiries concerning Canada, Boats, etc. -- Frederick consulted with Mr. S. D. Porter first. . . ." The men at first proposed driving the fugitives to Lewiston by night, but she "felt that the unusual mode would attract attention." She added that if a boat at the landing proved to be an "English boat it would be safer to put them on board." Luckily, there was an English boat at the landing, and she made arrangements with the black who kept the landing to give a special signal should any trouble occur at their approach. Nothing did happen, and the party reached the landing and boarded the boat safely (Palmer 6).
 
All day, she worked with him at the newspaper and in the evening they returned home, retreating into his study to share a writing table while working on speeches and editorials.  They shared an intellectual companionship in their work, activism, and love of literature, which began with her first gift to him of books in 1847, but their camaraderie shut out the rest of the family. 
 
… To a certain extent, Anna [Douglass] tolerated Julia because Julia had been the salvation of the newspaper and all that it represented for the Douglasses and abolition, and she held the mortgage on their home until 1853.  The family, therefore, owed quite a bit to the Englishwoman.  Yet, as an intrinsic part of Frederick’s work life who also lived in his home, Julia took him away from his family in the evenings when Anna could have reasonably expected his time to herself (Fought 1).
 
From time to time discontent in New York, Albany, Boston, even Rochester was expressed concerning Douglass' free association with Julia and Eliza. This criticism was to be expected from proslavery and rough elements, but it was heightened for others by the fact that the two sisters resided with Douglass ….Julia's removal to another location after three years' residence there helped to confirm the suspicion in some minds that all was not well with the Douglass family.
 
Julia wrote to Smith, ever a real confidante, about the "home trials" which Douglass suffered. In order to comfort him and to ease his tribulations, she read to him evenings. She nursed him in sickness. She was constantly at his side in his office, at home, and at the paper. In view of the closeness of Julia and Frederick, Mrs. Douglass would of necessity occupy the background on perhaps too many occasions. This no doubt rankled Mrs. Douglass deeply. The rising chorus of public comment, in addition to his home situation, caused Douglass as early as 1849 to castigate editorially those who "artfully and deliberately manufacture lies and insidiously circulate them with no other motive than to blast the fair name of another."  … Mrs. Gerrit Smith wrote from Rochester to her husband that Julia Griffiths "took tea with us. We had a long talk alone in which she poured out her sorrows. I will tell you when we meet. She is deeply afflicted with this 'strife of tongues'" (Palmer 6).
 
Garrisonians had not liked Douglass' initial show of independence and they liked even less his changing ideas. Julia Griffiths certainly played a considerable part in this estrangement. … Douglass had demonstrated his independence of Garrison by establishing a paper and by the gradual adoption of views unpleasing to his former mentor, culminating in the beliefs that anti-slavery action should be expressed by political and not merely moral means, that the Union need not be sundered, and that the churches were not necessarily supporters of slavery. All of these points of difference led to a growing estrangement between the former friends and to increasing attacks on Douglass and Julia Griffiths. Several papers like the Pennsylvania Freeman and The Liberator and particularly The Anti-Slavery Standard of September 24, 1853 which spoke of Julia as a "Jezebel" finally provoked Douglass to devote a large part of the December 9, 1853, issue of his paper to a rebuttal. This in turn caused Garrison to attack Douglass and Julia openly in an editorial in The Liberator of December 16, 1853, heading it with the caption, "The Mask Entirely Removed" and excoriating Douglass for his defection from Garrisonianism and blaming a ". . . bad advisor in Mr. Douglass' printing office," whom he accused of exerting "a pernicious influence upon him" (Palmer 7).
 
No doubt all this public clamor not only affected Douglass' peace of mind but also aggravated the various physical ailments from which he suffered. In a number of letters to Seward and particularly to Smith, Julia reported on Douglass' health and urged that they write to him.  What was apparent was that Douglass was in a profound state of depression over his situation at a time when his speaking tours were so demanding.  … there is no doubt that pressures of all kinds were building strongly during this period. Any doubts or fears he might have had were magnified several fold by these pressures and sure to depress him at times. 
 
By 1855 the paper was more than usually in need of substantial help. Julia, who, as director of its finances, had exhausted her resources locally and who, no doubt, by this time was anxious to see her native land, decided to return to England for the purpose of raising more money for the paper from sources which had proved fruitful in the past.   She returned to England, formed a number of additional anti-slavery societies, and began to write for Frederick Douglass' Monthly as well as to abstract Douglass' letters for the London Mercury. She did not return to the United States, but she continued her interest in this country, first, of course, by maintaining a correspondence with Douglass (Palmer 8).
 
Julia married Reverend H. O. Crofts in 1859.  He died in 1876.  Douglass and his second wife visited Julia while on a European tour in 1886. 
 
Julia's life apparently was not pleasant in her latter years. She supported herself for some time by running a boarding school for girls; but the project rather played out as she wrote from St. Neots to Douglass, "I have only 11 boarders this term -- and about the same number of day pupils -- and I NEED 4 or 5 MORE GOOD boarders to make all right . . . but if I gave up I should have nothing. . ." Later, she became a governess, but lost that position just before Christmas. She wrote, "I have not the least idea what will become of me . . . Oh, it is terrible to be homeless in this cold, selfish, world! . . . The mother of my pupils intimated to me that her husband did not want the governess of his children to have many friends -- in the town -- especially so many dissenters!" Julia's lifelong intellectual independence now endangered her livelihood at a time when she was unable to fight back with much strength .Within a few years an even more distressing eventuality came about. In a letter to Douglass in which there were scrawled only four or five words (in huge letters) to the line, with only eight or nine lines to the page, Julia wrote, "I have been under the care of a first class oculist since last January -- for a singular affection of the eyes, termed 'Hemoraged (sic) arteries' -- It greatly interferes with my correspondence. .. ." She concluded by begging Douglass to write, as she usually did (Palmer 8).
    
 
Works cited:
 
Cox, Rob S. Rochester Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society Papers, 1851-1868.”  William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan.  Net.  https://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsmss/umich-wcl-M-2084roc?view=text
 
Fee, Frank E. “To No One More Indebted: Frederick Douglass and Julia Griffiths, 1849-63.”  Academic journal article.  Questia: Trusted Online Research.   Net.  https://www.questia.com/library/journal/1P3-2367401191/to-no-one-more-indebted-frederick-douglass-and-julia
 
  
Palmer, Erwin. “A Partnership in the Abolition Movement.” University of Rochester Library Bulletin.  River Campus Libraries.  Net.  http://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/3476

Friday, February 16, 2018

Frederick Douglass's Women:
Anna Murray Douglass
 
Anna Murray, the daughter of Barnbarra and Mary Murray, recently freed slaves from Denton in Caroline County, Maryland, might have been born in 1813.  As a young adult, she worked as a housekeeper and laundress for white people in Baltimore, Maryland.  In 1838 she met Frederick Washington Bailey, a ship caulker six years her junior, “through mutual friends at the East Baltimore Mental Improvement Society, an organization of free blacks who promoted literacy.”  Criticized later in life for being essentially illiterate, her involvement with the Improvement Society and the fact that Douglass was attracted to her augurs that “she had had some interest in self-improvement in her youth” (Fought 1).
 
Several months later Anna helped Frederick flee to New York City.  Anna sold many of her belongings to help Frederick purchase the train tickets for his escape. She also sewed the sailor uniform he wore as a disguise and accumulated the necessary items for starting a household. Once Frederick reached his destination in New York City, he wrote for her to join him. The Reverend James W. C. Pennington performed their marriage ceremony, and the young couple moved to New Bedford, Massachusetts, first using the last name of Johnson but soon changing it to Douglass (Fought 1).
 
Their years living in New Bedford were apparently congenial.  Anna gave birth to four children -- Rosetta, Lewis Henry, Charles Remond, and Frederick Douglass Jr.  Frederick worked manual labor jobs while Anna kept house on a small budget.  Later, because Frederick had become an important member of and speaker for the American Anti-Slavery Society, he and his family moved to Lynn, Massachusetts. While he toured nearby states delivering anti-slavery messages, Anna took in piecework from the local shoe factories.
 
Strain began to manifest in the Douglass marriage …. He spent a good deal of time away from home giving lectures, including two years in Europe. Most of his white associates expressed disdain for his wife, at their most generous referring to Anna as a poor intellectual match for her husband, and treated her like a servant in her own home.   They … focused on Anna’s illiteracy and stoicism to bolster their arguments. Anna, however, had little time for intellectual pursuits while running a household and raising a family with little help from her husband (Fought 1).

 She did take an active role in the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society, however, “and later prevailed upon her husband to train their sons as typesetters for his abolitionist newspaper, the North Star” (Kentake 1).

By the late 1840s Anna had lost much of her emotional support.  Rosetta was away at school in Albany, New York.  Her friend and household helper, Harriet Bailey, had married and moved to Springfield, Massachusetts. Rumors reached Anna that Frederick, touring England, was receiving lavish attention from female supporters. When he returned to America in 1847, Douglass moved the family to Rochester, New York, taking Anna away from the small, active Lynn black community of which she had been a part.

“Shortly thereafter she suffered the indignity of having the British reformer Julia Griffiths move into the Douglass home, which caused a storm of controversy alleging Frederick’s infidelity with Griffiths. The departure of Griffiths was followed by the arrival of Ottila Assing, who installed herself in the Douglass home for several months out of the year over the next twenty years.”  During these years Anna was forced to host “a string of white abolitionists who could barely conceal their disdain for her. Only the extended stays of Rosetta and her children and the companionship of Louisa Sprague, Rosetta’s sister-in-law who lived in the Douglass home as a housekeeper, relieved Anna’s loneliness” (Fought 2).

Anna did understand her husband’s role in fighting slavery and her role as helpmate. She took pride in her husband’s appearance and accomplishments and in keeping a well-ordered home. She continued to take an active part in operation of the household, even after Douglass had become wealthy enough to hire servants (Fought 2).

After the family moved to Rochester, New York, Anna established the Douglass home as a station on the Underground Railroad, providing food, board and clean linen for hundreds of fugitive slaves on their way to Canada. Her daughter Rosetta later wrote that it was not unusual for her mother to be called up at all hours of the night to prepare supper for a "hungry lot of fleeing humanity" (MacLean 1).

Douglass did appreciate the role that Anna played in his life. During his first visit to England he maintained a cordial distance from his enthusiastic female admirers, and he defended his wife when anyone suggested that she was not a fit mate for him. After his return home in 1847 Anna conceived their last child, Annie, and Douglass risked his own arrest to reenter the United States to comfort Anna in the wake of that child’s death ten years later.(Fought 2)

Anna suffered from various ailments – particularly headaches that made her ill -- for much of her life. In her later years she suffered from a stroke that confined her to a wheelchair and her bedroom. In August 1882 she died hours after suffering a second stroke.  Frederick fell into a lengthy depression that he described the darkest moment of his life.

Anna’s daughter Rosetta’s memoir – My Mother as I Recall Her – places Anna squarely within the nineteenth-century “cult of domesticity.” Rosetta used Anna as a symbol of the equality of black women within that sphere during an era in which black women were portrayed as either the sexually promiscuous “Jezebel” or the maternal caretaker “Mammy” of white families. On the other hand, not only did Anna actively support the end of slavery by aiding her husband’s flight to freedom and allowing him to pursue antislavery work but also she maintained an impeccable home and preserved her own dignity and that of her marriage in the face of white assault. In Rosetta’s narrative Anna emerges as a model of middle-class womanhood (Fought 3).

Rosetta observed: Her courage, her sympathy at the start was the main-spring that supported the career of Frederick Douglass. As is the condition of most wives her identity became merged into that of her husband. Thus only the few of their friends in the North really knew and appreciated the full value of the woman who presided over the Douglass home for forty-four years (MacLean 4).
 
Works cited:
Fought, Leigh. “Black History Month: Anna Murray Douglass.” Oxford African American Studies Center, Oxford University Press, February 20, 2007.  Net.  https://blog.oup.com/2007/02/black_history_m3/
 
Kentake, Meserette. “Anna Murray Douglass: His Story Was Made Possible Because of Her Love.”  Kentake Page: A Love Affair with Black History, August 4, 2015.  Net.  http://kentakepage.com/anna-murray-douglass-his-story-was-made-possible-because-of-her-love/
 
MacLean, Maggie. “ Anna Murray Douglass.”  History of American Women Blog, March 5, 2017.  Net.  http://www.womenhistory.blog/2017/03/anna-murray-douglass.html


Thursday, February 8, 2018

Frederick Douglass -- End of Life
 
On January 9, 1894, at the great Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in Washington, Douglass delivered what was to be his last great speech, “The Lessons of the Hour.”
 
“A white man has but to blacken his face and commit a crime, to have some negro lynched in his stead.  An abandoned woman has only to start to cry that she has been insulted by a black man, to have him arrested and summarily murdered by the mob.”
 
 Douglasss … introduced the idea that guilt was a motivating force, if not among lynchers, then among those who defended them.  He went on to attack the spurious literacy tests and the various other “obstacles and sinuosities” used to keep the black man from voting.  “That this is done,” he continued, “is not only admitted, but openly defended and justified by so-called honorable men inside and outside of Congress.” 
 
Turning to the character of the black man, Douglass cited the fact that when southern men had been away from their homes during the Civil War, there had been no rape of the women by the slaves left behind.  And then he got down to the heart of the matter-the utility of accusing a whole group of a propensity for rape to justify the practice of lynching as a means of social control.  He identified “three distinct periods of persecution,” each with its own excuse for violence.  “First you remember it was insurrection,” seen as a threat during slavery.  “When that was worn out, [the danger of] negro supremacy” was the excuse, during Reconstruction.  “When that is worn out, now it is assault upon defenseless women” that is seen as the threat justifying violence.  “Now, my friends, I ask what is the rational explanation of this singular omission of this charge [rape] in the two periods preceding the present?”  Answering his own question, Douglass said that the third accusation had not been necessary as long as the threat of insurrection or of negro supremacy could be invoked to justify severe measures of social control; now “altered times and circumstances have made necessary a sterner … justification of Southern barbarism.”
 
 
… “I have sometime thought that the American people were too great to be small.”  Now, he was not so sure: “I cannot shut my eyes to the ugly facts before me.    He is a wiser man than I am, who can tell how low the moral sentiment of this republic may yet fall.  … The Supreme Court has surrendered.  … It has destroyed the civil rights bill, and converted the Republican party into a party of money rather than a party of morals.”
 
The idea of deporting his people received his greatest scorn.  …” The native land of the American negro is America.  His bones, his muscles, his sinews, are all American.  His ancestors for two hundred and seventy years have lived, and labored, and died on American soil, and millions of his posterity have inherited Caucasian blood.”  Shrewdly, he counted on the fact that the white South did not want to expel its workers: “The land owners of the South want the labor of the negro on the hardest possible terms,” terms including perpetual debt and a lien system by which “he is fastened to the land as by hooks of steel.”
 
“Words are things,” dangerous things, and the words “Negro Problem” were false, pernicious.  … This thinking had to end.  The problem was the nation’s problem; if it  could not be solved, the nation was doomed.  But, Douglass insisted, there was still a solution and he thundered forth a stream of correctives: “Let the white people of the North and South conquer their prejudices.  … Let the nation try justice and the problem will be solved.” …
 
… The speech was handsomely printed, with a fine photograph of the orator on the cover, and was much praised.  … It did absolutely no good (McFeely 377-381).
 
Douglass was as aware as anybody of the lengthening chain of his years, and presently he began to have premonitions.  This did not prevent him on February 20, 1895, from attending a Woman’s Council (Liberation) meeting at Metzerott Hall, and when he entered, the presiding officer, Mary Wright Sewall, promptly suspended business of the Council in order to allow Susan B. Anthony and the Reverend Anna H. Shaw to escort him to the platform as the membership rose spontaneously and, waving handkerchiefs, gave him a standing ovation.
 
He told Helen abut it at dinner that evening at Cedar Hill.  It was five o’clock, and they were not hurried because there was enough time to relax before his speaking engagement scheduled that evening at a local church.  When suddenly he rose from the table and turned toward the stairs, his wife thought he was about to dramatize the events of the afternoon, as he so often did, but she was petrified with shock when he bowed and began to sink lower and lower.
 
Later descriptions of the moment differ, but in one of them he is reported as saying, as he fell to his knees, “What is this?”  If he received an answer, he did not divulge it.  He never regained consciousness.  He was dead when the carriage arrived to take him to his speaking engagement (Bontemps 298-299).
 
On February 21, Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote, “Taking up the papers today, the first word that caught my eye thrilled my very soul.  Frederick Douglass is dead!”  … She recalled his “burning eloquence” before a Boston anti-slavery meeting when “with wit, satire, and indignation he graphically described the bitterness of slavery and the humiliation of subjection to those who, in all human virtues and powers, were inferior to himself.”  It was the first time she had seen Douglass: “Around him sat the great antislavery orators of the day, earnestly watching the effect of his eloquence on that immense audience, that laughed and wept by turns, completely carried away by the wondrous gifts of his pathos and humor.  … all the other speakers seemed tame after Frederick Douglass.”  He “stood there like an African prince, majestic in his wrath” (McFeely 382-383).
 
Works cited:
 
Bontemps, Arna, Free at Last, the Life of Frederick Douglass, New York, Dodd, Mead & Company, 1971.  Print
 
McFeely, William S.  Frederick Douglass.  New York, W. W. Norton & Company, 1991.  Print.