Carlisle's Chesapeake brings you first a series about Frederick Douglass, the native son of Talbot County on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Frederick Douglass' life spanned a good portion of the 19th Century. He believed that when you fight for one thing, you can fight for so much more. That is illustrated in Douglass' commitment to support the emancipation of African Americans, the voting rights for all men and women, temperance and religious hypocrisy.
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As an artist in two dimension, members of Working Artists Forum have much camaraderie and gain much support from their fellow members as explained by Betty Huang, president, and Carol McClees, member ...
Easton's Frederick Douglass Honor Society (00:13:33)
Brenda Wooden, President of the Frederick Douglass Honor Society (FDHS), tells us how the Society began with efforts to erect a statue in the great orator's and emancipator's name on the courthouse la...
Ken Morris, Douglass and Washington Descendant Talks about Modern Day Slavery (00:57:54)
Frederick Douglass began his Statesman years by moving from Rochester, New York to "A" Street on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. after the Civil War in 1872. Kenneth Morris, his great, great, great ...
Women in the World of Frederick Douglass with Leigh Fought (00:55:14)
Leigh Fought, Ph.D., professor at LeMoyne College in Syracuse, NY, recounts Frederick Douglass's 25 years in Rochester, New York, an area that was known as the "Burned over" District in the 1840's per...
Douglass Family Supports Frederick's Freedom Causes by Celeste- Marie Bernier (00:43:48)
Celeste-Marie Bernier, author of "If I Survive" and co-author of "Picturing Frederick Douglass: An Illustrated Biography of the Nineteenth Century's Most Photographed American" with John Stauffer and ...
Dale Green, Relative of Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass, Family Griot (00:52:47)
The Hill in Easton, Maryland lends clues to the rich religious heritage and culture of free persons of color, hirelings (who lent themselves out) and enslaved persons during the time of the American R...
Fighting "Separate But Equal" Laws with Frederick Douglass (00:37:05)
Steve Luxenburg tells accounts of Frederick Douglass in his book, "Separate: The Story of Plessy versus Ferguson." He begins with the dawn of railroads in the United States (1830s) and explains how c...
"Taking the Pledge" with Frederick Douglass in Cork, Ireland (00:20:17)
Ann Coughlin describes Frederick Douglass' visit to Cork, Ireland, her hometown. He stayed with the Jennings family whose daughter, Isabel was the secretary of the Cork Anti-Slavery Society. The Qua...
Daniel O'Connell Calls Frederick Douglass the Black O'Connell (00:21:31)
Ann Coughlin recounts how when Frederick Douglass meets Daniel O'Connell, O'Connell calls Douglass the Black O'Connell. Both great orators, O'Connell had consistently fought for the rights of America...
Frederick Douglass on Abolitionist Circuit in Ireland (00:27:17)
Ann Coughlin explains the trajectory of Frederick Douglass from a slave boy purchasing his first book in Baltimore, Maryland, the "Columbian Orator" to his arrival in Ireland. During the 19th Centur...
Douglass Flees U.S. First Going to Ireland During Great Potato Famine (00:29:56)
Ann Coughlin, an Irish Frederick Douglass scholar, explains what it was like for Douglass, a man still enslaved, on board the Cambria headed for the British Isles. Douglass left his wife, Anna, and ...
The Creation of Unionville, Talbot County, Maryland (00:37:20)
"Heaven and earth never agreed better to frame a place of man's habitation," wrote Captain John Smith as he sailed the Chesapeake Bay. Yet Bernard Demczuk explains the stories unfolded differently fo...
African American's Fourth of July, Juneteenth, with Professor Dale Green (00:03:46)
Professor Dale Green from Morgan State University in Baltimore celebrates Juneteenth in Easton, Maryland by commemorating the work of his ancestor by marriage, Frederick Douglass. The Frederick Dougl...
Civil War Findings on The Hill, Easton, Maryland with Tracy Jenkins (00:20:07)
Tracy Jenkins under the guidance of Dr. Mark Leone (Dr. Leone's two podcasts can be listened to by going to www.carlisleschesapeake.com) and Professor Dale Green, oversaw digs on The Hill in Easton, M...
Tarence Bailey Talks about Frederick Douglass, His Great Uncle (00:26:24)
Tarence Bailey, great nephew of Frederick Douglass, explains the evolution of his family name, Bailey, from the time his descendants from Ghana were brought first to the Caribbean and then up the Ches...
Curating Black History in Easton, MD, Birthplace of Frederick Douglass (00:27:52)
Easton, capital of Talbot County on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, is the birthplace of Frederick Douglass. He lived at the Wye House as depicted in his autobiographies. Dr. Mark Leone's team excava...
Frederick Douglass Series Trailer by Carlisle's Chesapeake (00:04:30)
Carlisle Hashim interviews Dr. Mark Leone, anthropologist and his associate, Tracy Jenkins, Tarence Bailey, Sr. and his cousin, Professor Dale Green, descendants, one a great nephew and the other by m...
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