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Home | Last Updated on2026/01/11

Frederick Douglass Free Audiobook Download

David W. Blight

Frederick Douglass: Voice Against Slavery and Advocate for Equality

4.1611724ratings(GoodReaders reference)

Information

Frederick Douglass audiobook cover

Author: David W. Blight

Narrator: Brian

Format: MP3

ISBN: 9781416590316

Language: English

Publish Date: 10/16/2018

Audiobook length: 31min

Frederick Douglass Audiobook by Chapters

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Chapter 1: I Have Come to Tell You Something About Slavery: An Address
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00:0004:30
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Chapter 2: American Prejudice and Southern Religion: An Address
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00:0006:18
Chapter 3: To William Lloyd Garrison
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00:0011:37
Chapter 4: To William Lloyd Garrison
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00:0008:29
Chapter 5: My Experience and My Mission to Great Britain: An Address
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00:0004:25
Chapter 6: To William Lloyd Garrison
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00:0010:15
Chapter 7: The Free Church of Scotland and American Slavery: An Address
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00:0021:02
Chapter 8: A Call for the British Nation to Testify against Slavery: An Address
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00:0021:15
Chapter 9: Farewell to the British People: An Address
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00:0070:18
Chapter 10: Country, Conscience, and the Anti-Slavery Cause: An Address
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00:0023:24
Chapter 11: To William Lloyd Garrison
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00:0013:52
Chapter 12: To the National Anti-Slavery Standard
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00:0008:19
Chapter 13: To Our Oppressed Countrymen
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00:0005:05
Chapter 14: The War with Mexico
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00:0010:52
Chapter 15: The Slaves’ Right to Revolt: An Address
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00:0004:20
Chapter 16: The Rights of Women
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00:0004:00
Chapter 17: To My Old Master
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00:0017:53
Chapter 18: On Robert Burns and Scotland: An Address
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00:0001:52
Chapter 19: Colonization
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00:0003:34
Chapter 20: The Constitution and Slavery
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00:0016:32
Chapter 21: The Destiny of Colored Americans
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00:0005:57
Chapter 22: Weekly Review of Congress
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00:0015:25
Chapter 23: At Home Again
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00:0004:34
Chapter 24: Prejudice against Color
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00:0008:37
Chapter 25: Do Not Send Back the Fugitive: An Address
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00:0008:44
Chapter 26: An Antislavery Tocsin: An Address
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00:0026:31
Chapter 27: Cuba and the United States
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00:0011:06
Chapter 28: Rochester and Slave-Catching
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00:0005:31
Chapter 29: What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? An Address
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00:0057:37
Chapter 30: Our Position in the Present Presidential Canvass
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00:0021:58
Chapter 31: Learn Trades or Starve!
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00:0005:21
Chapter 32: A Day and a Night in “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”
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00:0007:28
Chapter 33: No Peace for the Slaveholder: An Address
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00:0003:56
Chapter 34: The Industrial College
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00:0009:11
Chapter 35: The Nebraska Controversy—The True Issue
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00:0008:27
Chapter 36: Is it Right and Wise to Kill a Kidnapper?
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00:0012:52
Chapter 37: The Claims of the Negro Ethnologically Considered: An Address
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00:0054:57
Chapter 38: Slavery, Freedom, and the Kansas-Nebraska Act: An Address
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00:0042:11
Chapter 39: Self-Elevation—Rev. S. R. Ward
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00:0006:06
Chapter 40: The Final Struggle
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00:0005:12
Chapter 41: The Republican Party—Our Position
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00:0009:55
Chapter 42: What Is My Duty as an Anti-Slavery Voter?
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00:0012:02
Chapter 43: The Do-Nothing Policy
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00:0004:56
Chapter 44: The Dred Scott Decision: An Address
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00:0043:56
Chapter 45: The True Issue
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00:0004:08
Chapter 46: Progress of Slavery
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00:0010:22
Chapter 47: The Ballot and the Bullet
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00:0002:33
Chapter 48: To the Rochester Democrat and American
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00:0006:56
Chapter 49: Capt. John Brown Not Insane
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00:0005:52
Chapter 50: To My American Readers and Friends
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00:0009:58
Chapter 51: The American Constitution and the Slave: An Address
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00:0059:00
Chapter 52: The Republican Party
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00:0007:01
Chapter 53: The Late Election
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00:0011:53
Chapter 54: John Brown’s Contributions to the Abolition Movement: An Address
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00:0013:37
Chapter 55: The Union and How to Save It
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00:0009:57
Chapter 56: The Inaugural Address
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00:0025:06
Chapter 57: A Trip to Hayti
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00:0009:39
Chapter 58: The Fall of Sumter
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00:0006:33
Chapter 59: How to End the War
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00:0005:14
Chapter 60: The American Apocalypse: An Address
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00:0018:56
Chapter 61: Fighting Rebels with Only One Hand
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00:0006:53
Chapter 62: The Real Peril of the Republic
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00:0008:04
Chapter 63: Signs of the Times
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00:0008:46
Chapter 64: What Shall Be Done with the Slaves If Emancipated?
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00:0010:10
Chapter 65: The Black Man’s Future in the Southern States: An Address
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00:0037:49
Chapter 66: The Situation of the War
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00:0014:55
Chapter 67: The Slaveholders’ Rebellion: An Address
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00:0046:42
Chapter 68: The Spirit of Colonization
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00:0015:44
Chapter 69: The President and His Speeches
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00:0010:09
Chapter 70: Reply to Postmaster General Montgomery Blair
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00:0018:33
Chapter 71: Emancipation Proclaimed
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00:0012:01
Chapter 72: The Work of the Future
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00:0007:46
Chapter 73: What Shall Be Done with the Freed Slaves?
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00:0004:17
Chapter 74: January First 1863
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00:0011:27
Chapter 75: The Proclamation and a Negro Army: An Address
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00:0042:41
Chapter 76: Men of Color, To Arms!
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00:0005:59
Chapter 77: Why Should a Colored Man Enlist?
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00:0009:22
Chapter 78: Valedictory
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00:0007:58
Chapter 79: The Mission of the War: An Address
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00:0042:28
Chapter 80: What the Black Man Wants: An Address
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00:0020:08
Chapter 81: Reconstruction
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00:0015:55
Chapter 82: Our Composite Nationality: An Address
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00:0042:17
Chapter 83: Salutatory
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00:0007:40
Chapter 84: Woman and the Ballot
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00:0009:28
Chapter 85: Demands of the Hour
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00:0003:01
Chapter 86: The Unknown Dead: An Address
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00:0004:32
Chapter 87: Wasted Magnanimity
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00:0004:03
Chapter 88: The Labor Question
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00:0009:40
Chapter 89: Give Us the Freedom Intended for Us
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00:0005:34
Chapter 90: Oration in Memory of Abraham Lincoln: An Address
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00:0025:15
Chapter 91: There Was a Right Side in the Late War: An Address
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00:0021:53
Chapter 92: The Negro Exodus from the Gulf States: A Paper
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00:0048:28
Chapter 93: The Color Line
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00:0025:30
Chapter 94: This Decision Has Humbled the Nation: An Address
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00:0026:53
Chapter 95: The Future of the Negro
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00:0004:48
Chapter 96: The Future of the Colored Race
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00:0007:17
Chapter 97: Give Women Fair Play: An Address
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00:0016:22
Chapter 98: Haiti Among the Foremost Civilized Nations of the Earth: An Address
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00:0016:10
Chapter 99: Self-Made Men: An Address
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00:0068:41
Chapter 100: Lessons of the Hour: An Address
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00:0075:45

Who should listen Frederick Douglass

The summary audiobook of "Frederick Douglass" by David W. Blight is ideal for students, educators, and history enthusiasts who seek a concise yet impactful overview of the life and contributions of one of America's most influential abolitionists. Additionally, those interested in understanding the complexities of race, freedom, and justice in American history will find this summary informative and engaging. Whether for academic purposes or personal enrichment, this audiobook serves as an accessible entry point to the profound legacy of Frederick Douglass.

3 quotes from Frederick Douglass

  • "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men."
  • "Knowledge is the pathway from slavery to freedom."
  • "If there is no struggle, there is no progress."

Author : David W. Blight

David W. Blight is the Sterling Professor of History, African American Studies, and American Studies at Yale University, where he also serves as the Director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition. Before his tenure at Yale, he taught history at Amherst College for 13 years. Blight's distinguished scholarship has earned him numerous accolades, including the Bancroft Prize and the Frederick Douglass Prize for his work *Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory*, as well as the Pulitzer Prize and Lincoln Prize for *Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom*. In recognition of his contributions to the field, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2021.

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Home | Last Updated on2026/01/11

Frederick Douglass Free Audiobook Download

David W. Blight

Frederick Douglass: Voice Against Slavery and Advocate for Equality

4.1611724rating

Information

Author: David W. Blight

Narrator: Brian

Format: MP3

ISBN: 9781416590316

Language: English

Publish Date: 10/16/2018

AudioBook length: 31 min

Frederick Douglass audiobook cover
Loading audio chapters...

Who should listen Frederick Douglass

The summary audiobook of "Frederick Douglass" by David W. Blight is ideal for students, educators, and history enthusiasts who seek a concise yet impactful overview of the life and contributions of one of America's most influential abolitionists. Additionally, those interested in understanding the complexities of race, freedom, and justice in American history will find this summary informative and engaging. Whether for academic purposes or personal enrichment, this audiobook serves as an accessible entry point to the profound legacy of Frederick Douglass.

3 quotes from Frederick Douglass

  • "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men."
  • "Knowledge is the pathway from slavery to freedom."
  • "If there is no struggle, there is no progress."

Author: David W. Blight

David W. Blight is the Sterling Professor of History, African American Studies, and American Studies at Yale University, where he also serves as the Director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition. Before his tenure at Yale, he taught history at Amherst College for 13 years. Blight's distinguished scholarship has earned him numerous accolades, including the Bancroft Prize and the Frederick Douglass Prize for his work *Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory*, as well as the Pulitzer Prize and Lincoln Prize for *Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom*. In recognition of his contributions to the field, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2021.