Having run away from a life of slavery as a young man, Frederick Douglass went on to forge his own path as an abolitionist, orator, writer and statesman. In this 'Life of the Week' episode, Clare Elliott guides Paul Bloomfield through Douglass's life story, explaining how he came to play such a significant role in the fight for rights in the 19th-century US and beyond.
The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine.
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Secrets of the Anglo-Saxon bone chests
Jane Austen’s passion for fashion
The brain behind the Dambusters raid
Spanish flu: everything you wanted to know
Women who shaped the Roman empire
Great Reputations: Oliver Cromwell
The secret club for radical New York women
Margaret Cavendish: scandalous 17th-century writer
The triumph of Joan of Arc
Rome v Carthage: everything you wanted to know
Tokyo’s devastating 1923 earthquake
US Civil Rights: legacy
On the trail of a Nazi war criminal
How did empire shape modern Britain?
Why did medieval Europe become Christian?
The Mongols: everything you wanted to know
The lost world of Dickens’ London
US Civil Rights: Malcolm X’s assassination
The miners’ strike: a view from the ground
California’s hidden history of slavery
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