Reading Frederick Douglass Together
Other
13 Poplar Street,Gloucester MA 01930
26 June, 2021
Description
CAM invites the public to participate in reading abolitionist Frederick Douglass’ 1852 speech What to the Slave is the Fourth of July? Organized under the auspices of Mass Humanities, the event is designed to bring people from all walks of life together to read Douglass’ work and reflect on how themes addressed in the speech still resonant with Americans more than 150 years after they were written. Reading Frederick Douglass Together is presented by the Cape Ann Museum in partnership with the Cape Ann Slavery and Abolition Trust, a collaboration of the Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church and the Unitarian Universalist Society of Rockport. The event is designed to bring people from all walks of life together to read aloud Douglass’ work and reflect on how themes addressed in the speech still resonant with Americans more than 150 years after they were written. Copies of Douglass’ speech will be distributed to all in attendance and the public will be called upon to take turns reading passages from it in succession until they have read it all. Frederick Douglass had strong ties to the North Shore, living with his family in Lynn from 1841 to 1847 and traveling to Cape Ann on at least one occasion to speak about the abolitionist movement. And yet, Douglass’ connection to this area is not widely known, nor is the extent to which the abolitionist movement was active in this region during the 19th century. Reading Douglass’ speech provides the opportunity to share this hidden history in an intentional and inclusive manner. Moreover, it offers the chance to explore the disparity between how various ethnic, racial and socio-economic groups have experienced what is means to be an American, now and in the past. Once Douglass’ speech has been read, participants will be invited to discuss the significance of the oration. Members of the Cape Ann Museum staff, and the Cape Ann Slavery and Abolition Trust will facilitate the discussion with Nicole McClain, President of North Shore Juneteenth Association Inc. in Lynn. Reading Frederick Douglass Together is free and open to the public; participants are asked to register through Evenbrite. The reading will be held outdoors at the Cape Ann Museum Green and livestreamed on Facebook and Vimeo. The Cape Ann Museum tells multiple stories, all relating to a single remarkable place. From its earliest days as a fishing and shipping port to its mid-19th century role in the granite industry, to its singular charms of light and sea that have attracted countless artists from the 19th century to the present, Cape Ann boasts a rich and varied culture of nationally significant historical, industrial, and artistic achievement. The Museum's fine art collection includes the largest grouping of works by native son and renowned marine artist, Fitz Henry Lane, as well as work by other prominent painters and sculptors who lived on, visited or were inspired by Cape Ann. The work of contemporary Cape Ann artists is also collected and exhibited. The permanent collection includes fine and decorative arts, and artifacts from the major industries of the area - the fisheries and granite quarrying.
Discussion
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