The Frederick Douglass Book Center served as a bookshop and meeting place for the minorities of New York City.
[2] Richard B. Moore was a Caribbean activist and businessman who stood for socialism and black nationalism.
[4] Richard B Moore opened the Frederick Douglass Book Center in 1942 on West 125th Street in Harlem, New York.
[2] Moore originally attempted to follow the example of George Young, the man who created the first Afro-American book shop in Harlem.
Hope R. Stevens of Nevis; Dr Gerald A. Spencer of St. Lucia; Arthur E. King of Guyana; and Hodge Kirnon of Montserrat.