Slavery in southern cities and rural areas is very rich. The role of urban slaves is different from planting slaves. Movement to the city of Frederick Douglas is the turning point of his life and Frederick Douglas will not become a famous abolition slave unless he travels to the city. Ist and writer urban slaves usually participate in family, craftsmen, or factory work, but farm slaves are usually engaged in fields and other agricultural work.
Frederick Douglass' s autobiography by Frederick Douglass provides a first person perspective on the lives of southern and city slaves. Frederic Douglas can think about the evil of slavery and the reasons for its abolition. In his autobiography, Frederick Douglas talked about many ways in which slaves and masters were corrupted by the labor system. - Frederick Douglas is one of the most important leaders of the abolition movement that worked to end slavery in the United States for decades before the Civil War. The American Anti Slavery Association invited Douglas to attend a lecture as a talented lecturer and recognized as one of the first black speakers in the United States. When his autobiography was published in 1845, he won the world's reputation.
Famous writers and ex-slave Frederick Douglas wrote the lifetime and age of Frederick Douglas, a memoir of 1845 and an abstract slavery paper. By explaining the facts in his life in a clear and descriptive prose, he promoted the abolishment movement in the United States in the early 19th century. Among this revolutionary work, Douglas is the cruelty of the slave owner, how the slaves should behave in front of their master, fears to leave many slaves intact, their treatment He studied reading and writing and was a slave, but also suffered from white people. He was starved to death, worked on the scene until he collapsed, beaten because of collapse, sentenced to two years imprisonment after attempting a runaway, almost lost the left eye's attack when he was apprenticing at a shipyard It was.