Lewis Henry Douglass (1840-1908)

February 18, 2025 
/ Contributed By: David J. Mason

Lewis Henry Douglass (public domain)

Lewis Henry Douglass (public domain)
Photo Credit: University of Edinburgh, https://digital.nls.uk/learning/struggles-for-liberty/

Lewis Henry Douglass was an Army veteran, journalist, printer, and community activist who fought against racial inequality in America. A native of New Bedford, Massachusetts, Douglass was born on October 9, 1840, and was the eldest son of Frederick Douglass and Anna R. Murray-Douglass. He was the husband of Amelia Douglass and the brother of Rosetta Sprague, Frederick Douglass, Jr., Charles Remond Douglass, and Annie Douglass.

Several years after he was born, the family moved to Lynn, Massachusetts, and then to Rochester, New York, where, at sixteen, he entered his fatherโ€™s printing office and began to learn the printing trade. Upon learning that his children could not attend a nearby public school, his father hired a private tutor. Frederick Douglass also began a successful lobbying effort to desegregate schools in his adopted city of Rochester, New York. Lewis aided his fatherโ€™s antislavery efforts by setting the type for his newspaper, The North Star.

In 1863, Lewis Douglass, now and adult, was teaching at a school in New Jersey. Still, when he learned that his younger brother, Charles, had enlisted in the 54th Infantry, he immediately resigned from this school and enlisted in the same regiment, becoming its Sergeant Major. He took part in the famous assault on Fort Wagner, where his Colonel, Robt. G. Shaw and several hundred of the enlisted men fell. Lewis Douglass was disabled and a year later was discharged for disability.

After the war, Douglass settled in Denver, Colorado. He was employed as a compositor on the Denver News, a Democratic paper. He then came to Washington, D.C. and was appointed the first of his race as a compositor in the Government Printing Office. He was later promoted to proofreader.

In 1870, Douglass became Editor-in-Chief of the New National Era, a collaborative weekly newspaper effort between Frederick Douglass and civil rights activist, J. Sella Martin. The paper urged its Black readers to take advantage of educational opportunities and championed womenโ€™s rights, including the right to vote.

Douglass was also a member of the Upper House in the District of Columbiaโ€™s territorial government. He took a deep interest in the organization of the Districtโ€™s Public School system. He later served as Deputy United States Marshal for the District of Columbia, following his father who was the first Black U.S. Marshal in the nation when appointed U.S Marshal for the District of Columbia by President Rutherford B. Hayes in 1877. Lewis Douglass later served as inspector for the Post Office Department.

After suffering a stroke in 1904, Lewis Douglass declined in health. He died four years later at sixty-seven in Washington, D.C.

About the Author

Author Profile

David J. Mason, owner, and founder of HMG ePublishing, LLC, is an award-winning author and entrepreneur on the Internet since 1997, providing electronic books (ebooks) and telecommunication services. A native of Norfolk, Virginia, he specializes in ebooks preparation, production, promotion, distribution, and fulfillment. His curiosity for digital publishing began during the early formation of the ebooks publishing industry when he converted one of his previously published traditional manuals into an ebook.

Mr. Mason holds a Master of Science in chemistry from Hampton University in Virginia and a Bachelor of Science from Norfolk State University. He is a graduate of the Army War College. A Civil War and Black history enthusiast, Mr. Mason researched Private Parson Sykesโ€™ military service and, in September 2022, published The Self-Liberation of Parson Sykes: Enslavement in Southampton County, Virginia, based on his findings as a documental novel. He also authored the Environmental Compliance Tool Kit (Thompson Publishing Group, 1994).

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Mason, D. (2025, February 18). Lewis Henry Douglass (1840-1908). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/lewis-henry-douglass-1840-1908/

Source of the Author's Information:

Geni.com, โ€œSgt. Maj. Lewis Henry Douglass (1840 – 1908) – Genealogy,โ€ https://www.geni.com/people/Sgt-Maj-USA-Lewis-Henry-Douglass/6000000012153875582; Scott Vierick, CIP, โ€œFrederick Douglass, Family, and the Fight for the Soul of the Nation,โ€ https://www.historyassociates.com/frederick-douglass-family/.

Further Reading