It can be implied in the passage from Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass that the cruel reality of slavery is described as "<span>Slaves were treated like property and separated from loved ones." The author, Douglass is a known advocate of anti-slavery movements and women suffrage.</span>
Scottish<span> settlers continued to come to </span>Ireland<span> throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. </span>Scots-Irish<span> immigrants settled in the </span>American<span> colonies from the 1600s. ... The majority of the </span>Scots-Irish<span> who came to </span>America<span> in the colonial period settled in Pennsylvania, Virginia, and the Carolinas.</span>