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Thu, 03.03.18423

Frederick Douglass Jr., Abolitionist, and Editor born

Frederick Douglass Jr.

*Frederick Douglass Jr. was born on this date in 1842. He was an abolitionist, essayist, newspaper editor, and official recruiter of colored soldiers for the United States Union Army during the American Civil War. He was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, the second son of Frederick Douglass and his first wife, Anna Murray Douglass.

As a youngster while still under his parent’s roof, he joined them as active members and conductors of the Underground Railroad, receiving fugitives at their Rochester, New York home, feeding and clothing them, and providing safe, warm shelter as they made their way to freedom, which for many of these meant escape to Canada. Years later, his younger brother Charles would recall: “We have often had to get up at midnight to admit a sleigh-load and start fires to thaw the fugitives out. Every family member had to lend a hand to this work, and it was always cheerfully performed.”  The first residence for his family was at the house of Nathan and Polly Johnson, who were Blacks who regularly sheltered people seeking freedom from slavery at their homes. They stayed with the Johnsons in New Bedford, Massachusetts, from 1838 to 1839. Military service

During the American Civil War, Frederick Jr. joined his father as a recruiter of United States Colored Troops for the Union Army. He was commissioned as a recruiting sergeant attached to the U.S. 25th Colored Infantry. Although he was never a combat soldier, as were his two brothers during the intrastate conflict, he was proud to have been a recruiter on behalf of the Union cause, especially regarding the famous 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. As such, he worked closely with his renowned father who had been the foremost civilian recruiter for the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment and who had also served as a consultant and advisor to President Abraham Lincoln on the enlistment of men of color into the Union Army, in supporting the Commander in Chief's objective of reinforcing the North’s armed forces to put down the rebellion of the break-away Confederate States. His older brother Lewis Henry Douglass and younger brother Charles Remond Douglass were among the first enlistees in that famed regiment. He was the first man of color to enlist from the State of New York. 

Career

As was true of his father and two brothers, Frederick Jr., lived many lives in one. He was both a printer and editor, having learned these skills while working as an apprentice on his father's newspaper, The North Star. Together with his father and his brother Lewis, he became co-editor of the New National Era, a journal published specifically for freedmen and post-civil War freed slaves between the years 1870 and 1874. This post-abolitionist journal shared much in common purpose with an earlier journal The National Era, also published in Washington, D.C. between the years 1847 to 1860. This paper, which had serialized the stories that would become Uncle Tom's Cabin, was written by Harriet Beecher Stowe.

He was also a trained Typesetter, having completed formal training in Denver, Colorado. His younger brother Charles would later become the first typesetter employed by the U.S. Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C. When his father, Frederick Douglass Sr., was appointed United States Marshal by President Rutherford B. Hayes in 1877, Frederick Jr. was made a Bailiff. He later attained a clerkship in the office of the Recorder of Deeds during his father's tenure in that role for the District of Columbia. The senior Douglass had been nominated to this office by President James Garfield in 1881, serving in that office until his resignation following the inauguration of President Grover Cleveland in 1885.

On August 4, 1869, Virginia Hewlett Douglass and Frederick Douglass, Jr. married in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Together they had seven children, Fredrick Aaron Douglass, Virginia Anna Douglass, Lewis Emmanuel Douglass, Maud Ardell Douglass, Gertrude Pearl Douglass, Robert Smalls Douglass, and Charles Paul Douglass. Frederick Douglass Jr. died on July 26, 1892, and was initially interred at Graceland Cemetery, beside his beloved wife Virginia Hewlett who had preceded him in death on December 14, 1889. This later changed with the closing of Graceland Cemetery in 1894; the remains were exhumed and removed to Woodlawn Cemetery in the Benning Ridge section of Washington, D.C.

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