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.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Aztec warfare
History Behind the Headlines: Elections, ‘panda diplomacy’ and the word of the year
How spies shaped the modern world
The Habsburgs: everything you wanted to know
The medieval Welsh Marches: identity on the frontier
Boston Tea Party | 3. The destruction of the tea
Sherlock Holmes: the real history that inspired the detective stories
Life of the week: Queen Victoria
Merry Christmas from the HistoryExtra podcast
Druids: everything you wanted to know
Bannockburn: Robert the Bruce’s greatest victory
Boston Tea Party | 2. The Sons of Liberty
Amazing Grace: a story of salvation and slavery
Life of the week: Amelia Earhart
Nazi Germany: the myth of the innocent bystander
1970s Britain: everything you wanted to know
Caesar | 3. Master of his fate
Caesar | 2. Was this ambition?
Caesar | 6. The evil that men do
Caesar | 1. Beware the Ides of March
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Dan Snow’s History Hit
Front Row
Not Just the Tudors
The Ancients
Gone Medieval