Born into chains. Driven by truth. Destined for freedom.
Before he was a legend, he was a boy—enslaved, beaten, denied the right to read, and told he was nothing. But Frederick Douglass refused to be broken. Armed only with fierce intelligence and relentless courage burning in his heart, he taught himself to read and write in secret, igniting a revolution that would change not just his life, but the soul of a nation.
There Once Was A Slave... The Heroic Story Of Frederick Douglass brings to life the astonishing journey of Frederick Douglass, from the brutal fields of Maryland to the thundering podiums of abolitionist rallies. It is a biographical story of struggle and triumph, of words used as weapons, and of a man who rose from slavery to become a voice for liberty, dignity, and human rights.
A gripping, inspiring portrait of one of history’s greatest self-made heroes. His fight was for freedom—not just his own, but for all.
About the author:
Shirley Graham Du Bois (1896-1977) was a celebrated American composer, biographer, and civil rights activist. She is best known for composing Tom-Tom, the first opera written by a black woman staged by a major company.