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  1. Helen Pitts Douglass (1838–1903) was an American suffragist, known for being the second wife of Frederick Douglass. She also created the Frederick Douglass Memorial and Historical Association, [1] which became the Frederick Douglass National Historic Site .

  2. In January 1884, in a surprising move that not even their own families saw coming, Frederick Douglass and Helen Pitts married in the home of a mutual friend. The immediate reaction from their families was unfavourable, to say the least. Douglass’s children opposed the marriage because they saw it as an insult to their mother, who had passed ...

  3. Jan 31, 2019 · Born Helen Pitts (1838–1903), Helen Pitts Douglass was a suffragist and a North American 19th-century Black activist. She is best known for marrying politician and North American 19th-century Black activist Frederick Douglass, an interracial marriage considered surprising and scandalous at the time.

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  5. Mar 15, 2023 · March 15, 2023. Home - Mourning in the Morning - Helen Pitts Douglass – Advocate, Wife, Keeper of the Flame. While the interracial marriage between Helen Pitts of Honeoye, NY, and Frederick Douglass, pre-eminent leader of Nineteenth-Century Black America, scandalized many in the country and in Douglass’ family, Helen’s life had already ...

  6. It must be preserved! Helen Pitts Douglass passed away December 1, 1903 – eight years after her famous husband. When she passed, a significant amount of the mortgage remained. In her will, Mrs. Douglass left the home, 14.45 acres, and all the contents (except clothing and jewelry) to the FDMHA.

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  7. Mar 11, 2013 · Portrait of Helen Pitts Douglass, taken around 1880. Helen Pitts Douglass was one of the very first of these passionate women in preservation. As the daughter of parents who were both active in abolitionist and suffragist movements, Helen developed early on a determination to stand up for what she believed in.

  8. Sep 15, 2023 · Helen Pitts was born into an abolitionist family in Honeoye, New York, in 1838. She worked for racial equality and women's rights, eventually finding employment as a clerk in Frederick Douglass's office in the 1880s. Helen and Frederick married in 1884, after Anna's death. When Frederick died in 1895, Helen devoted herself to making Cedar Hill ...

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