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Transcribing Frederick Douglass
Discover the life of Frederick Douglass in his letters.
The campaign is primarily letters written by others to Douglass that document the personal and public. Some drafts and retained copies of outgoing correspondence are also included, as well as letters of his second wife Helen Pitts Douglass.
These pages come from the General Correspondence series of the Frederick Douglass Papers, as well as the Addition I and Miscellany series.
Douglass Day
This campaign launched in celebration of Douglass Day 2024!
Educator and activist Mary Church Terrell founded the holiday in 1897, just two years after Frederick Douglass's death. That history is documented in her papers, also transcribed by By the People and Douglass Day volunteers.
Our collaborators at the Center for Black Digital Research at Penn State have revived Douglass Day as a day of service to Black digital history. Learn more at douglassday.org.
Image filters can help!
This campaign contains some difficult-to-read pages. Our viewer filters may help you read light, dark, or blurry pages by allowing you to adjust the brightness and contrast.
Access the filters by clicking on the icon at the top of the image viewer (located between "flip horizontally" and "toggle full page").
The filters build upon each other, so you can apply more than one at a time.
Historical handwriting
Many documents in this campaign use Spencerian script, a handwriting used from about 1850 to 1925. It was standard in the U.S. prior to widespread adoption of typewriters.
These resources can help with you deciphering:
- Handwriting in the Civil War, Sullivan Press
- How to decipher unfamiliar handwriting, Natural History Museum Archives (UK)
- Palaeography: reading old handwriting, 1500 - 1800, A practical online tutorial, UK National Archives