Frederick Douglass, the Clarion VoiceDivision of Publications, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, 1976 - Всего страниц: 72 |
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... inferior , and I as much as any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race . The President held the same ideas in 1862 when he presented his colonization scheme to a group of black leaders . 19 ...
... inferior , and I as much as any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race . The President held the same ideas in 1862 when he presented his colonization scheme to a group of black leaders . 19 ...
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... inferior one . " This would never happen in the United States where blacks would always be " crawling in the dust to the feet of our oppressors . ” Out- side America , however , blacks could look forward to a glori- ous future . Delany ...
... inferior one . " This would never happen in the United States where blacks would always be " crawling in the dust to the feet of our oppressors . ” Out- side America , however , blacks could look forward to a glori- ous future . Delany ...
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... inferior race , for the search for fugitives was a reproach that must be wiped out . " Every slave - hunter who meets a bloody death in this infernal business is an argument in favor of the manhood of our race . Resistance is ...
... inferior race , for the search for fugitives was a reproach that must be wiped out . " Every slave - hunter who meets a bloody death in this infernal business is an argument in favor of the manhood of our race . Resistance is ...
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... to segregation . He upbraided his friend , Samuel Ward , when he spoke before a segregated audience . Such an act represented an admission that blacks believed 24 they were inferior . If blacks themselves accepted segregation.
... to segregation . He upbraided his friend , Samuel Ward , when he spoke before a segregated audience . Such an act represented an admission that blacks believed 24 they were inferior . If blacks themselves accepted segregation.
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John W. Blassingame. 24 they were inferior . If blacks themselves accepted segregation , why should whites cease to oppress them ? Perhaps the great- est anger Douglass displayed was toward Elizabeth Green- field , a free Negro singer ...
John W. Blassingame. 24 they were inferior . If blacks themselves accepted segregation , why should whites cease to oppress them ? Perhaps the great- est anger Douglass displayed was toward Elizabeth Green- field , a free Negro singer ...
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abolition abolitionists American Anna Anthony anti-slavery ballot box Baltimore black and white black man's black troops Blassingame bondage Brown Bureau Cedar Hill Charles Sumner churches citizens Civil colored Congress contended conventions Covey Delany denounced District of Columbia Doug Douglass argued Douglass became Douglass believed Douglass felt Douglass joined Douglass spent Douglass taught Douglass wrote editor emancipation Emancipation Proclamation equality fight former slaves fought Frederick Douglass free blacks free Negro freedmen freedom friends Fugitive Slave Haiti Henry Highland Garnet Honor Hugh Auld inferior John John Mercer Langston land lass liberty Lincoln live Lloyd Maryland master ment minister moral National North oppression paper plantation political prejudice and discrimination President protect recruiting Republican Party right to vote Robert Hayden Sage of Anacostia Samuel Ringgold Ward slaveholders slavery South speeches struggle Thomas Auld tion U.S. senator Union Army United Washington whip William Lloyd Garrison William Wells Brown women York