It depends on the location of Douglas, Maryland at the time of the survey. Douglas born in Tucker, Maryland, was in the early days at a large plantation. He was too young to work in the field, so I spent a lot of time driving the cow and cleaning the front yard. In his spare time he will help him do business such as hunting birds shot by Daniel's husband while his husband hunts.
When Douglas was about 5 years old, he was sent to Baltimore and lived with his older brother. There he becomes a partner of his master's son. Because he lives in this town, his life is much easier than plantation. Mr. Hugh gave him enough food and more comfortable living. Douglas said people living in this city are proud of their slave treatment.
During the day in Baltimore, Douglas ran quickly and gave more time for himself. In other words, I found a poor white boy who agreed to give him a class. Therefore, Baltimore's young Douglas life has considerable freedom compared to the plantation's lifetime.
The story of Frederick Douglas' s life, the story of life in Frederick Douglas of American slaves, American slaves were written by Frederick Douglas himself. About 1817, he was born slavery in Takaho, Maryland. He said "... I did not accurately understand my age and I have never seen a true record about it" (47). He is known as the eloquent speaker of the cause of abolitionism. He has treated himself as a slave until he flees from Maryland in 1838.
First-class black abolishist Frederic Douglas published 'Frederick Douglas's Life Story: American Slave'. Douglas was born in 1818 by the Maryland slavery. Twenty years later he began to escape the speech of talking and writing to promote the abolition and improvement of the social and economic situation of African Americans. Born in Kingston, New York in 1797, Sojourner Truth was called Isabella and taught that slavery is part of God's natural order. Isabella accepted this until the age of 30 and she heard the voice of God instructing herself to depart as a free woman. In 1843, Isabella was named Sojourner the truth and preached the abolition of women's suffrage rights and the gospel nationwide. She emerged as a nationally famous person, met with President Lincoln and President Grant. Her memoir was published in 1850 as "the truth of the traveler: the story of the slave of the north".