H. Ford Douglas, like Frederick Douglass (no relation) a Black abolitionist, opposed Lincoln’s candidacy. Douglas felt strongly that Lincoln and the Republican Party were not prepared to go far enough to abolish slavery and extend the rights of citizenship to Black Americans. This speech was delivered to the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society and published in The Liberator.
their domestic institutions in their own way. In the great debate between Lincoln and Douglas in Illinois, when he was interrogated as to whether he was in favor of the admission of more slave States into the Union, he said, that so long as we owned the territories, he did not see any other way of doing than to admit those States when they made application,
WITH OR WITHOUT SLAVERY…
Then, there is another item which I want to bring out in this connection. I am a colored man; I am an American citizen; and I think that I am entitled to exercise the elective franchise. I am about twenty-eight years old, and I would like to vote very much.
I think I am old enough to vote, and I think that, if I had a vote to give, I should know enough to place it on the side of freedom. (Applause.) No party, it seems to me, is entitled to the sympathy of anti-
slavery men, unless that party is willing to extend to the black man all the rights of a citizen.”
– Speech by H. Ford Douglas to the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, July 1860