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First delivered between the 1840s and 1890s, the addresses collected here present Frederick Douglass at the height of his power as an orator and statesman.
Spanning the decades before and after the American Civil War, these speeches reflect Douglass's evolution from abolitionist advocate to national moral voice. He speaks on slavery, citizenship, constitutional liberty, education, Reconstruction, and the unfinished work of equality. His language combines moral urgency with disciplined argument, grounded in both lived experience and constitutional principle.
Whether addressing the meaning of the Fourth of July, the responsibilities of freedom, or the promises of American democracy, Douglass articulates a vision of justice rooted in dignity and civic participation. His rhetoric is measured yet forceful, appealing not to sentiment alone but to reason, history, and conscience.
This Wilder Publications edition presents a carefully selected group of Douglass's most significant public addresses in their complete and unabridged form.
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