Frederick Douglas wrote his autobiography to see the world of slavery. His audience is different from the abolitionists to whites about this issue, but his purpose remains - to allow non-slaves to understand the fear of slavery. In this autobiography, Douglas simply eliminates the reader's "fantasy of slavery" by talking about his true story, everyone in slavery. Douglas works in a farm in Maryland. This is thought to be easier than the farms in Georgia or Alabama, because uncontrollable or slave slaves are punished for punishment by Georgian slave merchants (54).
Douglas' speech evolved from slave life memory to slavery criticism and demanded immediate abolition. As his speech became more sophisticated, few people believed he was actually a slave. To get rid of this question, Douglas announced his (1845) story about the lifetime and age of Frederick Douglas. After that he settled in Rochester, New York, where he founded the newspaper "Polaris". When a civil war broke out, Douglas struggled for allies' blacks and helped recruit the 54th and 55th Massachusetts Color Corps and later won the fight. As the war progressed, President Lincoln made Douglas a representative of his people. Over the past few years, Douglas has been involved in the Santo Domingo Commission (1871), Marshal (1877-1881) and the Colombian Special District debt record (1881-86), and US Secretary of Haiti (1889-91) He served as Secretary General. .
In his draft handwritten draft, Douglas explained the escape from slavery. In the early story announced before liberation, Douglas could not explain in detail the method he used to remove slavery. He did this in the last version of the story of his life, published in 1881, "The Life of Frederick Douglas and Its Time".
Every story of Frederick Douglas has the beginning, the middle and the end, and the story of Frederick Douglas begins with slavery and ends as a free man. He was born slavery, but the time that Frederick Douglas spent slavery was very important and it was realized on the timeline of his own life. Epiphany and realization brought about by his interpretation of events of change in life are the actual beginning, middle and end of his slave life for him. Frederick was born in Maryland and lived in the suburbs of the plantation where his grandmother was taking care of him and his children in the early stages of his life.