The year was 1845. Three years later, after a speaking tour of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Douglass published the first issue of the North Star, a four-page weekly, out of Rochester ...
In Rochester, New York, the last stop on the Underground Railroad, Frederick Douglass published the abolitionist newspaper The North Star, naming it after the icon followed by so many escaped ...
Now a general for her Civil War military service, Harriet Tubman looked to the North Star for direction and hope.
There Douglass established his own newspaper, The North Star. He did so without the blessing of his mentor and friend Garrison. The printer felt abandoned and betrayed. The rift between the two ...
Last night was a night when the visible and the invisible, the tangible and the intangible came together, as North Star shone ...
North Star is a musical celebration of Belfast's black community and the city's links to the 19th Century anti-slavery campaigner, Frederick Douglass. The African-American statesman was born into ...
And this was one of the reasons why he wanted to start The North Star, his newspaper. [Chatelain] For Frederick Douglass, starting the North Star was critical to create a Black voice of abolition.