WASHINGTON — The press gallery overlooking the U.S. House chamber has been renamed after the abolitionist, writer and presidential adviser Frederick Douglass in a bipartisan move brokered by Black lawmakers.
The renaming of the press gallery, spearheaded by Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., was conceived over the last year after the congressman said he brainstormed with his staff on ways to commemorate the history of prominent Americans, including Black Americans, across the Capitol.
''When we talk about Frederick Douglass, we are talking about a man who possessed a profound and unshakable faith in Americans, in America's family,'' Donalds said in remarks celebrating the dedication.
Douglass wrote about congressional proceedings from the chamber during the Civil War. His public speeches and letters to President Abraham Lincoln and northern Republican congressmen helped galvanize support among lawmakers and the public for the abolition of slavery.
''It's an important thing for us to give honor where honor is due. That's a biblical admonition,'' House Speaker Mike Johnson said during the unveiling of a plaque that now overlooks the entrance to the gallery. ''Frederick Douglass is certainly deserving of that honor.''
A bipartisan celebration in a divided Washington
Prominent Black conservatives, including activists, faith leaders and senior Trump administration officials, mingled with lawmakers at a ceremony inside the U.S. Capitol. Staffers from the Library of Congress displayed artifacts from Douglass' life.
The celebration, which came during Black History Month and the 100th anniversary of the earliest national observance of Black history, coincided with intense debate over how race, history and democracy are understood in the U.S.