Announcements and Information
The Frederick Douglass Institute is a university program for advancing multicultural studies across the curriculum and for deepening the intellectual heritage of Frederick Douglass, the former slave, distinguished orator, journalist, author, and statesman. Douglass, who was a frequent visitor to the West Chester area, gave his last public lecture on West Chester's campus on February 1, 1895. Guided by the spirit of Douglass and his legacy, the Institute aims to create opportunities to build a better community for all of us to fulfill our destiny as human beings.
The mission of the Frederick Douglass Institute is to be a window to the world of knowledge, a catalyst for bridging systems of thought and expression, a light of hope and a place of encouragement for all who seek change. The Institute is a university program for advancing multicultural studies across the curriculum and for deepening the intellectual heritage of Frederick Douglass, the former slave, distinguished orator, journalist, author, and statesman. Douglass, who was a frequent visitor to the West Chester area, gave his last public lecture on West Chester's campus on February 1, 1895. Guided by the spirit of Douglass and his legacy, the Institute aims to create opportunities to build a better community for all of us to fulfill our destiny as human beings. On October, 1895; however, at the inauguration of an institute named for him in Baltimore, Maryland, Douglass said that the mission was "to be a dispenser of knowledge, a radiator of light. In a word, we dedicate this Institution to virtue, temperance, truth, liberty, and justice."
The activities of the Institute take place on and off campus. With undergraduate and graduate students and West Chester faculty, the Institute sponsors seminars and forums on selected topics. The Anna Murray Douglass Circle is the name for a lecture series offering to bring leading intellectuals to campus.
At West Chester University, the Frederick Douglass Institute is primarily involved in four areas:
Conducting research on multiculturalism and on Frederick Douglass;
Establishing opportunities for advanced study for public and private school teachers and for members of the academic community;
Sponsoring distinguished exhibits, lectures and library collections;
Collaborating with historical societies and other educational and cultural agencies.
Illuminator: Fall 2006
Check out our pictures
from the 2007
PGG Dinner!!
Copyright 2006 The Frederick Douglass Institute.