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Oration, Delivered in Corinthian Hall, Rochester: About this Edition

Oration, Delivered in Corinthian Hall, Rochester
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table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. About this Edition
  3. Oration
    1. Oration
    2. The Present.
    3. Internal Slave Trade.
    4. Religious Liberty.
    5. The Church Responsible.
    6. Religion in England and Religion in American
    7. The Constitution
    8. Notes


CUNY Student Editions are open-source, peer-reviwed ebooks offered to the public at no cost.


Editions are prepared by a team of CUNY scholar-students with the aim of making texts accessible. Editions include an introduction, notes, and resources. Files meet professional accessibility guidelines.


Each edition is based on a historical text and meets MLA guidelines for scholarly editions.

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How to Cite in MLA 8

Douglass, Frederick. Oration, delivered at Corinthian Hall, Rochester. 1852. Edited by Paul L. Hebert, ver. 1.0., CUNY Student Editions, 2020. https://cuny.manifoldapp.org/projects/oration-delivered-in-corinthian-hall-rochester

Username. Annotation on Oration, delivered at Corinthian Hall, Rochester. CUNY Manifold. Annotation URL.

About this Edition

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. The text is prepared based the text’s first publication, a short pamphlet, published by request, in Rochester by Lee, Mann and Company, 1852. The speech has generally been better known as “What to the Negro is July 4th.” Spelling and formatting have been retained including italics and capitals.

To read and annotate this book online, download it as an Epub, review a record of the peer-review process, or contribute to the next version, visit https://cuny.manifoldapp.org/projects/equality-of-the-sexes.

Version 1.0. Published 1 Dec. 2019.

Version Editor

Version Editor's picture.

Paul L. Hebert is a Teaching Fellow at Queens College, CUNY and a doctoral candidate in English at the Graduate Center, CUNY. Paul's research focuses on nineteenth-century American and trans-atlantic literature. He has published essays and presented at conferences about maritime narratives in nineteenth-century popular culture and open-access pedagogy.

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End Papers: Olga, Libby. “Seigaiha.” Toptal Subtle Patterns. https://­www.­toptal.­com/­designers/­subtlepatterns/­seigaiha/

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