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Chris Calle Portable Battery Charger featuring the painting Frederick Douglass by Chris Calle

Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.

The watermark at the lower right corner of the image will not appear on the final product.

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Frederick Douglass Portable Battery Charger

Chris Calle

by Chris Calle

$46.50

This product is currently out of stock.

Size

Orientation

Image Size

 
 

Product Details

You'll never run out of power again!   If the battery on your smartphone or tablet is running low... no problem.   Just plug your device into the USB port on the top of this portable battery charger, and then continue to use your device while it gets recharged.

With a recharge capacity of 5200 mAh, this charger will give you 1.5 full recharges of your smartphone or recharge your tablet to 50% capacity.

When the battery charger runs out of power, just plug it into the wall using the supplied cable (included), and it will recharge itself for your next use.

Design Details

In 1817, Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey was born a slave in Tuckahoe, Maryland. When he was only eight, he was sent to Baltimore to work for... more

Dimensions

1.80" W x 3.875" H x 0.90" D

Ships Within

1 - 2 business days

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Portable Battery Charger Tags

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Painting Tags

paintings calle paintings americana paintings black history paintings frederick douglass paintings douglass paintings abolitionist paintings slavery paintings emancipation paintings underground railroad paintings civil war paintings american civil war paintings

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Artist's Description

In 1817, Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey was born a slave in Tuckahoe, Maryland. When he was only eight, he was sent to Baltimore to work for one of his master's relatives. He worked in a shipyard caulking wooden ships to make them watertight until 1838, when he ran away to New Bedford, Massachusetts, changing his name to Frederick Douglass to avoid capture. At first he found work in New Bedford as a caulker, but when other men refused to work beside a black, he took whatever work he could get, mostly collecting rubbish and digging cellars. When he gave a speech at a meeting of the Massachusetts Antislavery Society, he so impressed his audience that he was hired to lecture about his experiences as a slave. Douglass used his lecture earnings to aid fugitive slaves and also headed the Rochester station of the Underground Railroad. In 1845, he published The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an autobiography that revealed his master's identity and threatened the former slav...

 

$46.50