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File #: 20-1203-0909    Name: Frederick Douglas Phase I Naming (45-Day Notice Period)
Type: Action Item Status: Passed
File created: 8/31/2020 In control: Board of Commissioners
On agenda: 9/9/2020 Final action: 9/9/2020
Title: REQUEST TO INITIATE 45-DAY NOTICE PERIOD TO NAME PARK 218 IN HONOR OF ANNA AND FREDERICK DOUGLASS
Sponsors: Planning and Construction
Indexes: Park Renaming-Phase I, 45 Day Notice Period

Title

REQUEST TO INITIATE 45-DAY NOTICE PERIOD

TO NAME PARK 218

IN HONOR OF ANNA AND FREDERICK DOUGLASS

 

Body

 

To the Honorable Board of Commissioners of the Chicago Park District

 

I. Recommendation

It is recommended that an order be entered authorizing the General Superintendent or his designee to initiate a 45-day notice period to solicit public input to name Park 218 and all its associated features in honor of Anna and Frederick Douglass.

Proposed Park or feature:  Park 218

Location:  1401 S. Sacramento Drive

Community Area:  Douglas Community

Wards:  12 and 24

Proposed Name:  Anna and Frederick Douglass Park

 

II. Explanation

 

The Chicago Park District naming and renaming procedures allow for the naming of features in parks, including playgrounds and buildings.  The renaming of parks is addressed in the Chicago Park District Code - Chapter 7, E.3. The proposal to name Park 218 to Anna and Frederick Douglass Park has strong community support. 

Proposed Name - Anna and Frederick Douglass Park

In 1818, Frederick Douglass was born Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey, of mixed race, into slavery on the eastern shore of Maryland.  After Douglass taught himself to read and write, he found work at the docks in Baltimore.  It was there he met a free black woman named Anna Murray.  She had been born free, to parents who were former slaves.  Ms. Murray worked as a laundress and a housekeeper, gaining independent financial security for herself.  Her freedom provided Frederick with the courage to believe that his own dreams of freedom could become reality.  She provided funds to Frederick, which he used to disguise himself as a sailor and escaped slavery.  Ms. Murray shortly followed Frederick to New York, where they married and established a household.  When they later settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts, and in an effort to hide his identity, he dropped his middle name, and they changed their last name to Douglass.  Throughout their 44-year marriage, Anna provided the support system for Frederick’s growing work as an orator and abolitionist, maintaining their household and raising their five children.   

Douglass began reading The Liberator, an abolitionist publication, and began attending abolitionist meetings, where he met the editor of The Liberator, William Lloyd Garrison.   Thereafter, the Anti-Slavery Society hired Douglass as a paid lecturer.  This was his beginning as an orator; he would become one of the most famous orators of his time.  Douglass travelled across the Midwest and Northern states making speeches. He focused on the abolishment of slavery, the promoting of the moral and intellectual improvement of colored people, and women’s rights.

In 1845 his autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, was published, revealing his identity as a run-away slave.  This forced him to flee overseas to avoid being captured and returned to slavery. The book was an international best-seller.

His freedom was purchased two years later by fellow abolitionists from England. and he returned to the U.S. a free man. Upon his return, he moved his family to Rochester, New York, and produced an influential African American antislavery publication, The North Star.  In 1851, Douglass partnered with an abolitionist, Gerrit Smith, to revamp the paper.  It now represented Smith’s National Liberty Party.  Smith provided Douglass with financial subsidies and a wider audience.  Douglass changed the name of his paper to Frederick Douglass’ Paper.  In 1855, Douglass published his second autobiography My Bondage and My Freedom, another best-seller, even more popular than the first. 

Initially, Douglass criticized Lincoln for moving too slowly with the abolishment of slavery.    In 1863, Douglass’ attitude toward Lincoln dramatically changed.  Douglass knew that the Emancipation Proclamation was a revolutionary document. In 1865, Douglass attended Lincoln’s second Inaugural Speech, and often quoted from the speech.  Upon hearing of Lincoln’s death, Douglass was said to feel the death as both a personal and national calamity.

In 1870, Douglass moved to Washington D. C.  For the rest of his life, he was a Republican party insider and elder statesman.  Douglass was elected president of the troubled Freeman’s Savings Bank in 1874 to help shore up confidence among its depositors. It proved a futile effort and he recommended to Congress that the bank be closed in June of that same year. This closing landed a devastating blow to the African American community.

In 1877, President Hayes appointed Frederick Douglass, marshal of the District of Columbia.  This federal appointment required Senate approval, the first time a black man received such a position.  Douglass served in that role until 1881.  Douglass next served as the Recorder of Deeds for the District of Columbia, from 1881 to 1886.  Also in 1881, Douglass published a third autobiography, Life and Times of Frederick Douglass.  In 1889, Douglass became the first African American to hold high office in the U.S. government when he served as Minister Resident and Consul General to Haiti, from 1889 to 1891.

Fredrick Douglass was the most prominent African American at Chicago’s 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition.  Having previously served as the United States minister to Haiti, Douglass attended as the fair as an official representative of Haiti.  There, he joined forces with Ida B. Wells to produce pamphlet, The Reason Why the Colored American Is Not in the World’s Columbian Exposition; twenty thousand copies of it were distributed.  Frederick Douglass also spoke at the fair.

Frederick Douglass died on February 20, 1895, and was buried next to Anna Murray Douglass.  He remained a central figure for the fight for equality for African Americans and women for his entire life.  Frederick Douglass is honored with the following named after him:  neighborhoods, parks and sites, streets and bridges, schools, and statues in numerous states.  There is a statue of Frederick Douglass located at the Lincoln Presidential Library in Springfield, Illinois.

 

III. Park Naming Procedures

Chapter VII, Section E.2 of the Code of the Chicago Park District, (the Naming Ordinance), which governs the naming and renaming of parks and park features, states that if a proposed name honors a person, the (i) person shall have been deceased for a least one (1) year prior to consideration; and (ii) the person shall have demonstrated a continued commitment and made an extraordinary contribution to civic betterment, locally, nationally or internationally.

Pursuant to the Naming Ordinance, this request to rename and name parks has been forwarded to the Secretary of the Chicago Park District, who shall (i) file a copy of this request with the Board of Commissioners (or appropriate Committee); and (ii) initiate a notice period of at least 45 days to provide notice and solicit public input.  Such notice shall be posted at the respective subject park field house (or for any park without a field house, at the nearest field house) and it shall be sent to advisory councils located within a one (1) mile radius of the subject park.  At the conclusion of the notice period, the General Superintendent or his designee may in his discretion recommend to the Board that it approve the requested renames and names.