SUBMISSION PORTAL OPENS MARCH 1, 2026
DEADLINE APRIL 16, 2026 (11:59 PM EST)
NATIONAL WINNERS ANNOUNCED APRIL 27, 2026
The Frederick Douglass Civic Legacy Writing Contest invites students nationwide to engage directly with the ideas of one of America’s most powerful moral voices. Hosted by the Frederick Douglass Foundation (FDF) Education & Historical Initiatives and the Frederick Douglass Freedom Alliance (FDFA) Civic Engagement Initiative, this national challenge encourages independent thinking, moral clarity, and civic responsibility.
This is a direct-to-student contest — no school sponsorship required. Students may participate independently from public, private, charter, virtual, or homeschool settings.
Our goal is simple but profound: To help young Americans understand that freedom is not merely claimed — it is exercised with responsibility.
Why This Contest Matters
Frederick Douglass believed that liberty required education, moral courage, and active citizenship. Through this challenge, students will:
✔️ Engage directly with Douglass’s words and ideas
✔️ Strengthen writing and reasoning skills
✔️ Apply historic civic principles to modern life
✔️ Develop confidence in argumentation and expression
✔️ Reflect on freedom, leadership, and personal responsibility
Students are evaluated on civic thinking and reasoning — not historical trivia.
High School (9–12)
1st: $500 + Certificate + National Feature
2nd: $250 + Certificate + Honorable Mention
3rd: $100 + Certificate + Honorable Mention
Middle School (6–8)
1st: $250 + Certificate + National Feature
2nd/3rd: $100+ Certificate + Honorable Mention
Elementary (2–5)
1st Place: $100 + Certificate + National Feature
2nd/3rd: Certificate
Early Learners (PK–1)
1st Place: $50 + Certificate
2nd/3rd: Certificate
Cash prizes are issued to the parent/guardian listed on the registration form.
All students select one shared civic question, scaled by grade level:
1. Faith, Freedom, and Responsibility: What responsibility comes with freedom, and how should individuals use it?
2. Education, Self-Governance, and Leadership: Why did Douglass believe education is foundational to liberty and leadership?
3. What Douglass Expected of Citizens — Then and Now: What does responsible citizenship require today?
Each prompt is designed to encourage thoughtful reflection on freedom, education, citizenship, and moral courage.
Open nationwide to students in: Public Schools, Private Schools, Charter Schools, Virtual Academies, Homeschool Settings.
The Grading Divisions are: PK–1, Grades 2–5, Grades 6–8, Grades 9–12
Word limits vary by division, from guided sentence responses for early learners to analytical essays for high school students.
Option 1 — Parent/Guardian Submission (Recommended)
Parent completes registration form, uploads submission, and provides consent.
Option 2 — Teacher Submission
Teachers may submit student work if documented parent consent is secured and certified.
Parent/Guardian Consent & Release: I acknowledge that I am the parent or legal guardian of the student named above. I understand that my child is voluntarily participating in the Frederick Douglass Civics Legacy Essay Contest, sponsored by the Frederick Douglass Foundation. I give my permission for my child to prepare and submit an original essay and to participate in all phases of the competition. I acknowledge and consent to the submission, review, and judging of my child’s essay, including anonymous evaluation. I further grant permission for the Frederick Douglass Foundation to use my child’s name, likeness, image, and submitted materials — without compensation — for educational, promotional, archival, and informational purposes, including websites, social media, livestreams, and printed materials. I affirm that the submitted essay is the original work of my child, that only one essay will be submitted during the competition year, and that we have reviewed and agree to abide by all Rules and Regulations of the contest. By checking the box below and submitting this form, I certify that I am the parent or legal guardian of the participating student and that I provide this consent knowingly and voluntarily.