Frederick Douglass stood at the podium ... Douglass published the first issue of the North Star, a four-page weekly, out of Rochester, New York. Ever since he first met Garrison in 1841, the ...
as North Star shone in and over Belfast. The show takes its title from the antislavery newspaper Frederick Douglass founded ...
Now a general for her Civil War military service, Harriet Tubman looked to the North Star for direction and hope.
The North Star, edited by Frederick Douglass, was the most influential. Its readership included not only African Americans but also presidents and members of Congress, who used the paper to keep ...
Frederick Douglass, a former slave ... which he then used to set up anti-slavery newspaper The North Star. "The city, and the North East in general, was a hub of radical anti-slavery activism ...
North Star is a musical celebration of Belfast's black community and the city's links to the 19th Century anti-slavery ...
Author Sidney Morrison captivated a diverse audience at a recent speaking engagement at the Cleveland Public Library, ...
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.
Last night was a night when the visible and the invisible, the tangible and the intangible came together, as North Star shone ...
"Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave." Three years later, after a speaking tour of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Douglass published the first issue of "The North Star ...