Booker T. Washington
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Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute | |
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Ernest Davidson Washington Booker T. Washington, Jr. |
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Booker Taliaferro Washington (April 5, 1856 – November 14, 1915) was an American educator, author, and orator. Between 1890 and 1915, Washington was the primary leader in the African-American community and of the contemporary Black elite.
Born into slavery on April 5, 1856, in Hale's Ford, Virginia, Washington was
Washington was a key proponent of African-American businesses and one of the founders of the
After his death in 1915, he came under heavy criticism for accommodating white supremacy, despite his claims that his long-term goal was to end the disenfranchisement of African Americans, the vast majority of whom still lived in the South. Decades after Washington's death in 1915, the civil rights movement of the 1950s took a more active and progressive approach, which was also based on new grassroots organizations based in the South. Washington's legacy has been controversial in the civil rights community. However, a revisionist view appeared in the late twentieth century that interpreted his actions positively.
Early life

Booker was born into slavery to Jane, an enslaved
From his earliest years, Washington was known simply as "Booker", with no middle or surname, in the practice of the time.[5] His mother, her relatives and his siblings struggled with the demands of slavery. He later wrote:
I cannot remember a single instance during my childhood or early boyhood when our entire family sat down to the table together, and God's blessing was asked, and the family ate a meal in a civilized manner. On the plantation in Virginia, and even later, meals were gotten to the children very much as dumb animals get theirs. It was a piece of bread here and a scrap of meat there. It was a cup of milk at one time and some potatoes at another.[6]
When he was nine, Booker and his family in Virginia gained freedom under the Emancipation Proclamation as U.S. troops occupied their region. Booker was thrilled by the formal day of their emancipation in early 1865:
As the great day drew nearer, there was more singing in the slave quarters than usual. It was bolder, had more ring, and lasted later into the night. Most of the verses of the plantation songs had some reference to freedom.... [S]ome man who seemed to be a stranger (a United States officer, I presume) made a little speech and then read a rather long paper—the Emancipation Proclamation, I think. After the reading we were told that we were all free, and could go when and where we pleased. My mother, who was standing by my side, leaned over and kissed her children, while tears of joy ran down her cheeks. She explained to us what it all meant, that this was the day for which she had been so long praying, but fearing that she would never live to see.[7]
After emancipation Jane took her family to the free state of West Virginia to join her husband, Washington Ferguson, who had escaped from slavery during the war and settled there. The illiterate boy Booker began painstakingly to teach himself to read and attended school for the first time.[8]
At school, Booker was asked for a surname for registration. He chose the family name of Washington.[5] Still later he learned from his mother that she had originally given him the name "Booker Taliaferro" at the time of his birth, but his second name was not used by the master.[9] Upon learning of his original name, Washington immediately readopted it as his own, and became known as Booker Taliaferro Washington for the rest of his life.[9]
Booker loved books:
The Negro worshipped books. We wanted books, more books. The larger the books were the better we like[d] them. We thought the mere possession and the mere handling and the mere worship of books was going, in some inexplicable way, to make great and strong and useful men of our race.[10]
Higher education
Washington worked in salt furnaces and coal mines in West Virginia for several years to earn money. At age 16, he made his way east—mostly on foot—to
Tuskegee Institute
In 1881, the Hampton Institute president Samuel C. Armstrong recommended Washington, then age 25, to become the first leader of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (later Tuskegee Institute, now Tuskegee University), the new normal school (teachers' college) in Alabama. The new school opened on July 4, 1881, initially using a room donated by Butler Chapel A.M.E. Zion Church.[15]
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The next year, Washington purchased a former plantation to be developed as the permanent site of the campus. Under his direction, his students literally built their own school: making bricks, constructing classrooms, barns and outbuildings; and growing their own crops and raising livestock; both for learning and to provide for most of the basic necessities.[16] Both men and women had to learn trades as well as academics. The Tuskegee faculty used all the activities to teach the students basic skills to take back to their mostly rural black communities throughout the South. The main goal was not to produce farmers and tradesmen, but teachers of farming and trades who could teach in the new lower schools and colleges for blacks across the South. The school expanded over the decades, adding programs and departments, to become the present-day Tuskegee University.[17][page needed]

The Oaks, "a large comfortable home," was built on campus for Washington and his family.[18] They moved into the house in 1900. Washington lived there until his death in 1915. His widow, Margaret, lived at The Oaks until her death in 1925.[19]
In 1896 when Washington reviewed the study conducted by George Washington Carver about the infection plaguing the soybean crop he invited Carver to head the Agriculture Department at Tuskegee, where they became close friends.[20] Carver later autographed commemorative stamps issued in 1940 in Washington's honor.
Later career
Washington led Tuskegee for more than 30 years after becoming its leader. As he developed it, adding to both the curriculum and the facilities on the campus, he became a prominent national leader among African Americans, with considerable influence with wealthy white philanthropists and politicians.[21]
Washington expressed his vision for his race through the school. He believed that by providing needed skills to society, African Americans would play their part, leading to acceptance by white Americans. He believed that blacks would eventually gain full participation in society by acting as responsible, reliable American citizens. Shortly after the Spanish–American War, President William McKinley and most of his cabinet visited Booker Washington. By his death in 1915, Tuskegee had grown to encompass more than 100 well-equipped buildings, roughly 1,500 students, 200 faculty members teaching 38 trades and professions, and an endowment of approximately $2 million (~$43.6 million in 2023).[22]
Washington helped develop other schools and colleges. In 1891 he lobbied the West Virginia legislature to locate the newly authorized

Washington was a dominant figure of the African-American community, then still overwhelmingly based in the South, from 1890 to his death in 1915. His
Throughout the final twenty years of his life, he maintained his standing through a nationwide network of supporters including black educators, ministers, editors, and businessmen, especially those who supported his views on social and educational issues for blacks. He also gained access to top national white leaders in politics, philanthropy and education, raised large sums, was consulted on race issues, and was awarded honorary degrees from Harvard University in 1896 and Dartmouth College in 1901.[22]
Late in his career, Washington was criticized by civil rights leader and NAACP founder W. E. B. Du Bois. Du Bois and his supporters opposed the Atlanta Address as the "Atlanta Compromise", because it suggested that African Americans should work for, and submit to, white political rule.[25] Du Bois insisted on full civil rights, due process of law, and increased political representation for African Americans which, he believed, could only be achieved through activism and higher education for African Americans.[26] He believed that "the talented tenth" would lead the race. Du Bois labeled Washington, "the Great Accommodator."[26] Washington responded that confrontation could lead to disaster for the outnumbered blacks, and that cooperation with supportive whites was the only way to overcome racism in the long run.[citation needed]
While promoting moderation, Washington contributed secretly and substantially to mounting legal challenges activist African Americans launched against segregation and disenfranchisement of blacks.[27][page needed] In his public role, he believed he could achieve more by skillful accommodation to the social realities of the age of segregation.[28]
Washington's work on education helped him enlist both the moral and substantial financial support of many major white
He also gave lectures to raise money for the school. On January 23, 1906, he lectured at Carnegie Hall in New York in the Tuskegee Institute Silver Anniversary Lecture. He spoke along with prominent orators of the day, including Mark Twain, Joseph Hodges Choate, and Robert Curtis Ogden; it was the start of a capital campaign to raise $1,800,000 (~$45.8 million in 2023) for the school.[29]
The schools which Washington supported were founded primarily to produce teachers, as education was critical for the black community following emancipation. Freedmen strongly supported literacy and education as the keys to their future. When graduates returned to their largely impoverished rural southern communities, they still found few schools and educational resources, as the white-dominated state legislatures consistently underfunded black schools in their segregated system.[citation needed]
To address those needs, in the 20th century, Washington enlisted his philanthropic network to create matching funds programs to stimulate construction of numerous rural public schools for black children in the South. Working especially with Julius Rosenwald from Chicago, Washington had Tuskegee architects develop model school designs. The Rosenwald Fund helped support the construction and operation of more than 5,000 schools and related resources for the education of blacks throughout the South in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The local schools were a source of communal pride; African-American families gave labor, land and money to them, to give their children more chances in an environment of poverty and segregation. A major part of Washington's legacy, the model rural schools continued to be constructed into the 1930s, with matching funds for communities from the Rosenwald Fund.[30][page needed]
Washington also contributed to the Progressive Era by forming the National Negro Business League. It encouraged entrepreneurship among black businessmen, establishing a national network.[30][page needed]
His autobiography, Up from Slavery, first published in 1901,[31] is still widely read in the early 21st century.
Marriages and children

Washington was married three times. In his autobiography
In 1885, the widower Washington married again, to
In 1893, Washington married
Politics and the Atlanta compromise
Washington's 1895 Atlanta Exhibition address was viewed as a "revolutionary moment"[34] by both African Americans and whites across the country. At the time W. E. B. Du Bois supported him, but they grew apart as Du Bois sought more action to remedy disfranchisement and improve educational opportunities for blacks. After their falling out, Du Bois and his supporters referred to Washington's speech as the "Atlanta Compromise" to express their criticism that Washington was too accommodating to white interests.[35]
Washington advocated a "go slow" approach to avoid a harsh white backlash.[34] He has been criticized for encouraging many youths in the South to accept sacrifices of potential political power, civil rights, and higher education.[36] Washington believed that African Americans should "concentrate all their energies on industrial education, and accumulation of wealth, and the conciliation of the South".[37] He valued the "industrial" education, as it provided critical skills for the jobs then available to the majority of African Americans at the time, as most lived in the South, which was overwhelmingly rural and agricultural. He thought these skills would lay the foundation for the creation of stability that the African-American community required in order to move forward. He believed that in the long term, "blacks would eventually gain full participation in society by showing themselves to be responsible, reliable American citizens". His approach advocated for an initial step toward equal rights, rather than full equality under the law, gaining economic power to back up black demands for political equality in the future.[38] He believed that such achievements would prove to the deeply prejudiced white America that African Americans were not "'naturally' stupid and incompetent".[39]
Well-educated blacks in the North lived in a different society and advocated a different approach, in part due to their perception of wider opportunities. Du Bois wanted blacks to have the same "classical" liberal arts education as upper-class whites did,[40] along with voting rights and civic equality. The latter two had been ostensibly granted since 1870 by constitutional amendments after the Civil War. He believed that an elite, which he called the talented tenth, would advance to lead the race to a wider variety of occupations.[41] Du Bois and Washington were divided in part by differences in treatment of African Americans in the North versus the South; although both groups suffered discrimination, the mass of blacks in the South were far more constrained by legal segregation and disenfranchisement, which totally excluded most from the political process and system. Many in the North objected to being 'led', and authoritatively spoken for, by a Southern accommodationist strategy which they considered to have been "imposed on them [Southern blacks] primarily by Southern whites".[42]
Historian Clarence E. Walker wrote that, for white Southerners,
Free black people were 'matter out of place'. Their emancipation was an affront to southern white freedom. Booker T. Washington did not understand that his program was perceived as subversive of a natural order in which black people were to remain forever subordinate or unfree.[43]
Both Washington and Du Bois sought to define the best means post-Civil War to improve the conditions of the African-American community through education.[44]
Part of a series on |
African Americans |
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Blacks were solidly
Washington worked and socialized with many national white politicians and industry leaders. He developed the ability to persuade wealthy whites, many of them self-made men, to donate money to black causes by appealing to their values. He argued that the surest way for blacks to gain equal social rights was to demonstrate "industry, thrift, intelligence and property".[45] He believed these were key to improved conditions for African Americans in the United States. Because African Americans had recently been emancipated and most lived in a hostile environment, Washington believed they could not expect too much at once. He said, "I have learned that success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has had to overcome while trying to succeed."[17][page needed]
Along with Du Bois, Washington partly organized the "Negro exhibition" at the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris, where photos of Hampton Institute's black students were displayed. These were taken by his friend Frances Benjamin Johnston.[46] The exhibition demonstrated African Americans' positive contributions to United States' society.[46]
Washington privately contributed substantial funds for legal challenges to
Wealthy friends and benefactors

State and local governments historically underfunded black schools, although they were ostensibly providing "separate but equal" segregated facilities. White philanthropists strongly supported education financially. Washington encouraged them and directed millions of their money to projects all across the South that Washington thought best reflected his self-help philosophy. Washington associated with the richest and most powerful businessmen and politicians of the era, as well as many other educational leaders, such as William Rainey Harper, president of the University of Chicago.[48] He was seen as a spokesperson for African Americans and became a conduit for funding educational programs.[49]
His contacts included such diverse and well known entrepreneurs and philanthropists as
Henry Huttleston Rogers

A representative case of an exceptional relationship was Washington's friendship with millionaire industrialist and financier
A few weeks later, Washington went on a previously planned speaking tour along the newly completed Virginian Railway, a $40-million enterprise that had been built almost entirely from Rogers's personal fortune. As Washington rode in the late financier's private railroad car, Dixie, he stopped and made speeches at many locations. His companions later recounted that he had been warmly welcomed by both black and white citizens at each stop.[citation needed]
Washington revealed that Rogers had been quietly funding operations of 65 small country schools for African Americans, and had given substantial sums of money to support Tuskegee and Hampton institutes. He also noted that Rogers had encouraged programs with matching funds requirements so the recipients had a stake in the outcome.[citation needed]
Anna T. Jeanes
In 1907
Julius Rosenwald
In 1912, Rosenwald was asked to serve on the Board of Directors of Tuskegee Institute, a position he held for the remainder of his life. Rosenwald endowed Tuskegee so that Washington could spend less time fundraising and more managing the school. Later in 1912, Rosenwald provided funds to Tuskegee for a pilot program to build six new small schools in rural Alabama. They were designed, constructed and opened in 1913 and 1914, and overseen by Tuskegee architects and staff; the model proved successful.[citation needed]
After Washington died in 1915, Rosenwald established
Up from Slavery to the White House
Washington's long-term adviser, Timothy Thomas Fortune (1856–1928), was a respected African-American economist and editor of The New York Age, the most widely read newspaper in the black community within the United States. He was the ghost-writer and editor of Washington's first autobiography, The Story of My Life and Work.[54] Washington published five books during his lifetime with the aid of ghost-writers Timothy Fortune, Max Bennett Thrasher and Robert E. Park.[55]
They included compilations of speeches and essays:[56]
- The Story of My Life and Work (1900)
- Up from Slavery (1901)
- The Story of the Negro: The Rise of the Race from Slavery (2 vols., 1909)
- My Larger Education (1911)
- The Man Farthest Down (1912)
In an effort to inspire the "commercial, agricultural, educational, and industrial advancement" of African Americans, Washington founded the National Negro Business League (NNBL) in 1900.[57]
When Washington's second autobiography, Up from Slavery, was published in 1901, it became a bestseller—remaining the best-selling autobiography of an African American for over sixty years[58]—and had a major effect on the African-American community and its friends and allies.
Dinner at the White House

In October 1901, President Theodore Roosevelt invited Washington to dine with him and his family at the White House. Although Republican presidents had met privately with black leaders, this was the first highly publicized social occasion when an African American was invited there on equal terms by the president. Democratic Party politicians from the South, including future governor of Mississippi James K. Vardaman and Senator Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina, indulged in racist personal attacks when they learned of the invitation. Both used the derogatory term for African Americans in their statements.[59][60] The meeting was also condemned by the Democratic perennial presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan, who argued that "the more advanced race never has consented, and probably never will consent, to be dominated by the less advanced" despite him having previously praised Washington.[61]
Vardaman described the White House as "so saturated with the odor of the nigger that the rats have taken refuge in the stable,"[62][63] and declared, "I am just as much opposed to Booker T. Washington as a voter as I am to the cocoanut-headed, chocolate-colored typical little coon who blacks my shoes every morning. Neither is fit to perform the supreme function of citizenship."[64] Tillman said, "The action of President Roosevelt in entertaining that nigger will necessitate our killing a thousand niggers in the South before they will learn their place again."[65]
Ladislaus Hengelmüller von Hengervár, the Austro-Hungarian ambassador to the United States, who was visiting the White House on the same day, said he found a rabbit's foot in Washington's coat pocket when he mistakenly put on the coat. The Washington Post described it as "the left hind foot of a graveyard rabbit, killed in the dark of the moon".[66] The Detroit Journal quipped the next day, "The Austrian ambassador may have made off with Booker T. Washington's coat at the White House, but he'd have a bad time trying to fill his shoes."[66][67]
Death

Despite his extensive travels and widespread work, Washington continued as principal of Tuskegee. Washington's health was deteriorating rapidly in 1915; he collapsed in New York City and was diagnosed by two different doctors as having Bright's disease, an inflammation of the kidneys, today called nephritis. Told he had only a few days left to live, Washington expressed a desire to die at Tuskegee. He boarded a train and arrived in Tuskegee shortly after midnight on November 14, 1915. He died a few hours later at the age of 59.[68] His funeral was held on November 17, 1915, in the Tuskegee Institute Chapel. It was attended by nearly 8,000 people.[11] He was buried nearby in the Tuskegee University Campus Cemetery.
At the time he was thought to have died of congestive heart failure, aggravated by overwork. In March 2006, his descendants permitted examination of medical records: these showed he had hypertension, with a blood pressure more than twice normal, and that he died of kidney failure brought on by high blood pressure.[69]
At Washington's death, Tuskegee's endowment was close to $2,000,000 (equivalent to $62,164,474 in 2024).[70] Washington's greatest life's work, the education of blacks in the South, was well underway and expanding.[citation needed]
Honors and memorials

For his contributions to American society, Washington was granted an honorary
At the center of Tuskegee University, the Booker T. Washington Monument was dedicated in 1922. Called Lifting the Veil, the monument has an inscription reading:
He lifted the veil of ignorance from his people and pointed the way to progress through education and industry.
In 1934, Robert Russa Moton, Washington's successor as president of Tuskegee University, arranged an air tour for two African-American aviators. Afterward the plane was renamed as the Booker T. Washington.[74]
On April 7, 1940, Washington became the first African American to be depicted on a United States postage stamp.[75]
In 1942, the liberty ship Booker T. Washington was named in his honor, the first major oceangoing vessel to be named after an African American. The ship was christened by noted singer Marian Anderson.[76]

In 1946, he was honored on the first coin to feature an African American, the Booker T. Washington Memorial half dollar, which was minted by the United States until 1951.[77]
On April 5, 1956, the hundredth anniversary of Washington's birth, the house where he was born in Franklin County, Virginia was designated as the Booker T. Washington National Monument.[78]
A state park in Chattanooga, Tennessee, was named in his honor, as was a bridge spanning the Hampton River adjacent to his alma mater, Hampton University.[79][80]
In 1984, Hampton University dedicated a Booker T. Washington Memorial on campus near the historic Emancipation Oak, establishing, in the words of the university, "a relationship between one of America's great educators and social activists, and the symbol of Black achievement in education".[81]
Numerous high schools, middle schools and elementary schools[82] across the United States have been named after Booker T. Washington.
In 2000, West Virginia State University (WVSU; then West Va. State College), in cooperation with other organizations including the Booker T. Washington Association, established the Booker T. Washington Institute, to honor Washington's boyhood home, the old town of Malden, and Washington's ideals.[83]
On October 19, 2009, WVSU dedicated a monument to Booker T. Washington. The event took place at WVSU's Booker T. Washington Park in
At the end of the 2008 presidential election, the defeated Republican candidate Senator John McCain recalled the stir caused a century before when President Theodore Roosevelt invited Booker T. Washington to the White House. McCain noted the evident progress in the country with the election of Democratic Senator Barack Obama as the first African-American President of the United States.[85]
Legacy

Booker T. Washington was so acclaimed as a public leader that the period of his activity, from 1880 to 1915, has been called the Age of Booker T. Washington.[58] Historiography on Washington, his character, and the value of that leadership has varied dramatically. After his death, he came under heavy criticism in the civil rights community for accommodationism to white supremacy. However, since the late 20th century, a more balanced view of his very wide range of activities has appeared. As of 2010, the most recent studies, "defend and celebrate his accomplishments, legacy, and leadership".[86]
Washington was held in high regard by business-oriented conservatives, both white and black. Historian Eric Foner argues that the freedom movement of the late nineteenth century changed directions so as to align with America's new economic and intellectual framework. Black leaders emphasized economic self-help and individual advancement into the middle class as a more fruitful strategy than political agitation. There was emphasis on education and literacy throughout the period after the Civil War. Washington's famous Atlanta speech of 1895 marked this transition, as it called on blacks to develop their farms, their industrial skills, and their entrepreneurship as the next stage in emerging from slavery.[87]
By this time, Mississippi had passed a new constitution, and other Southern states were following suit, or using electoral laws to raise barriers to voter registration; they
Washington repudiated the historic abolitionist emphasis on unceasing agitation for full equality, advising blacks that it was counterproductive to fight segregation at that point. Foner concludes that Washington's strong support in the black community was rooted in its widespread realization that, given their legal and political realities, frontal assaults on white supremacy were impossible, and the best way forward was to concentrate on building up their economic and social structures inside segregated communities.[89] Historian C. Vann Woodward in 1951 wrote of Washington, "The businessman's gospel of free enterprise, competition, and laissez faire never had a more loyal exponent."[90]
Historians since the late 20th century have been divided in their characterization of Washington: some describe him as a visionary capable of "read[ing] minds with the skill of a master psychologist," who expertly played the political game in nineteenth-century Washington by its own rules.[91] Others say he was a self-serving, crafty narcissist who threatened and punished those in the way of his personal interests, traveled with an entourage, and spent much time fundraising, signing autographs, and giving flowery patriotic speeches with much flag waving – acts more indicative of an artful political boss than an altruistic civil rights leader.[91]
People called Washington the "Wizard of Tuskegee" because of his highly developed political skills and his creation of a nationwide political machine based on the black middle class, white philanthropy, and Republican Party support. Opponents called this network the "Tuskegee Machine". Washington maintained control because of his ability to gain support of numerous groups, including influential whites and black business, educational and religious communities nationwide. He advised as to the use of financial donations from philanthropists and avoided antagonizing white Southerners with his accommodation to the political realities of the age of Jim Crow segregation.[28]
The Tuskegee machine collapsed rapidly after Washington's death. He was the charismatic leader who held it all together, with the aid of Emmett Jay Scott. But the trustees replaced Scott, and the elaborate system fell apart.[92][93] Critics in the 1920s to 1960s, especially those connected with the NAACP, ridiculed Tuskegee as a producer of a class of submissive black laborers. Since the late 20th century, historians have given much more favorable view, emphasizing the school's illustrious faculty and the progressive black movements, institutions and leaders in education, politics, architecture, medicine and other professions it produced who worked hard in communities across the United States, and indeed worldwide across the African Diaspora.[94] Deborah Morowski points out that Tuskegee's curriculum served to help students achieve a sense of personal and collective efficacy. She concludes:
- The social studies curriculum provided an opportunity for the uplift of African Americans at time when these opportunities were few and far between for black youth. The curriculum provided inspiration for African Americans to advance their standing in society, to change the view of southern whites toward the value of blacks, and ultimately, to advance racial equality.[95]
At a time when most black Americans were poor farmers in the South and were ignored by the national black leadership, Washington's Tuskegee Institute made their needs a high priority. It lobbied for government funds and especially from philanthropies that enabled the institute to provide model farming techniques, advanced training, and organizational skills. These included Annual Negro Conferences, the Tuskegee Experiment Station, the Agricultural Short Course, the Farmers' Institutes, the Farmers' County Fairs, the Movable School, and numerous pamphlets and feature stories sent free to the South's black newspapers.[96]
Representation in other media
- Washington and his family's visit to the White House was dramatized as the subject of an opera, A Guest of Honor, by Scott Joplin, noted African-American composer. It was first produced in 1903.[97]
- In 1949 the anthology radio drama Destination Freedom recapped his life in "Up from Slavery", written by Richard Durham.[98]
- E. L. Doctorow's 1975 novel Ragtime features a fictional version of Washington trying to negotiate the surrender of an African-American musician who is threatening to blow up the Pierpont Morgan Library. The role was played by Moses Gunn in the 1981 film adaptation.
- Washington was portrayed by Madame C. J. Walker.
- In the HBO series The Gilded Age, Washington is portrayed by actor Michael Braugher.[99]
Works
- The Future of the American Negro – 1899[100]
- The Story of My Life and Work (1900)[101]
- Washington, Booker T.; Wood, Norman B.; Williams, Fannie Barrier (1900). MacBrady, John E. (ed.). A New Negro for a New Century: An Accurate and Up-to-Date Record of the Upward Struggles of the Negro Race. Chicago, IL: American Publishing House.
- Up from Slavery – 1901
- Character Building – 1902
- Working with the Hands – 1904, a sequel to Up From Slavery[102]
- Tuskegee & Its People (editor) – 1905
- Frederick Douglass – 1906 Online[103][104]
- The Negro in the South (with W. E. B. Du Bois) – 1907
- The Negro in Business – 1907
- The Story of the Negro: The Rise of the Race from Slavery (1909)[105]
- My Larger Education (1911)[106]
- The Man Farthest Down: A Record of Observation and Study in Europe – 1912
See also
- African American founding fathers of the United States
- African-American literature
- Booker T. Washington Junior College
- Double-duty dollar
- History of African-American education
- List of civil rights leaders
- List of things named after Booker T. Washington
- Rosenwald School
- Roscoe Simmons
- Ralph Waldo Tyler
Explanatory notes
- ^ Louis R. Harlan writes, "BTW gave his age as nineteen in September 1874, which would suggest his birth in 1855 or late 1854.... As an adult, however, BTW believed he was born in 1857 or 1858. He celebrated his birthday on Easter, either because he had been told he was born in the spring, or simply in order to keep holidays to a minimum. After BTW's death, John H. Washington reported seeing BTW's birth date, April 5, 1856, in a Burroughs family bible. On this testimony, the Tuskegee trustees formally adopted that day as 'the exact date of his birth.' The trustees were understandably anxious to establish a time for celebrating the Founder's birthday, however, and apparently no one has seen this Bible since."[3]
References
- ^ "1956 Centennial of Booker T. Washington 3¢ Stamps". Collector's Weekly Magazine. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
- ^ Washington, Booker T. (1906) [1901]. Up from Slavery: An Autobiography. New York: Doubleday, Page & Co. p. 1.
- ^ Harlan, Louis R (1972), Booker T. Washington: volume 1: The Making of a Black Leader, 1856–1901, p. 325.
- ^ Washington 1906, p. 2.
- ^ a b Washington 1906, p. 34.
- ^ Washington 1906, p. 9.
- ^ Washington 1906, pp. 19–21.
- ^ Washington 1906, p. 27.
- ^ a b Washington 1906, p. 35.
- ISBN 978-1940425771.
- ^ a b c "Booker T. Washington". Tuskegee University. Archived from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
- ^ a b c "Booker T. Washington - Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved November 1, 2024.
- ^ "Booker T. Washington". Tuskegee University. Retrieved November 1, 2024.
- ^ "Civil Rights Movement In Virginia". Virginia Museum of History & Culture. Retrieved October 31, 2024.
- ^ Gary, Shannon (2008). "Tuskegee University". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Birmingham, AL: Alabama Humanities Foundation. Archived from the original on April 18, 2020.
- ^ "The Booker T. Washington Era (Part 1)". African American Odyssey. Library of Congress. Archived from the original on September 16, 2008. Retrieved September 3, 2008..
- ^ a b c Harlan 1972.
- ^ "The Oaks" Archived May 16, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, Tuskegee Museum, National Park Service
- ^ Southeastern Regional Office of the National Park Service (2018). The Oaks: Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site Cultural Landscape Report (PDF). Atlanta, GA: National Park Service. p. 1. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
After Dr. Washington's death in 1915, his wife Margaret Murray Washington occupied the residence until her death in 1925.
- ^ Macintosh, Barry (August 1977). "George Washington Carver and the Peanut". American Heritage Magazine. 28 (5).
- ^ Harlan 1971.
- ^ a b "Booker T. Washington". Encyclopedia Britannica. Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc. 2020. Archived from the original on May 10, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
- ^ "Booker T. Washington Monument to Be Dedicated in Malden". WVSU. Archived from the original on February 18, 2012.
- ISBN 978-0252082283.
- ^ "Booker T. Washington and the 'Atlanta Compromise'". National Museum of African American History and Culture. Smithsonian. n.d. Archived from the original on October 7, 2020. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
- ^ a b Du Bois 1903, p. [page needed].
- ^ Meier 1957.
- ^ a b Harlan 1983, p. 359.
- ^ "Choate and Twain Plead for Tuskegee | Brilliant Audience Cheers Them and Booker Washington" Archived March 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, January 23, 1906.
- ^ a b Anderson 1988.
- ^ Washington 1901.
- ^ Encyclopedia.com website, Washington, Olivia Davidson (1854–1889)
- ^ "Inductees". Alabama Women's Hall of Fame. State of Alabama. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved November 6, 2021.
- ^ a b Bauerlein 2004, p. 106.
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- ^ Brown, Angelique (July 18, 2011). "Washington, Booker Taliaferro". Social Welfare History Project. Virginia Commonwealth University. Archived from the original on August 31, 2018. Retrieved April 5, 2018.
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- ^ Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty! An American History (2008), p. 659.
- )
- ^ ISBN 978-1-4214-0470-7– via Google Books.
- JSTOR 44176406.
- ^ Carl S. Matthews, "Decline of Tuskegee Machine, 1915-1925-Abdication of Political-Power." South Atlantic Quarterly 75#4 (1976): 460–469 .
- ^ Pamela Newkirk, "Tuskegee's Talented Tenth: Reconciling a Legacy." Journal of Asian and African Studies 51.3 (2016): 328–345.
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- S2CID 149916547.
- ^ Ray Argyle (2009). Scott Joplin and the Age of Ragtime. McFarland, pp. 56ff.
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- ISBN 978-3849674748. Archived from the original on April 6, 2023. Retrieved March 7, 2023.)
{{cite book}}
: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help - )
- ^ "This book has been described as "laudatory (and largely ghostwritten)." Alexander, Adele, Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington at the Tuskegee Institute, 1892: A Little-known Encounter, The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History: History Resources".
- ^ John Hope Franklin writes that Washington's biography of Douglass "has been attributed largely to Washington's friend, S. Laing Williams". Introduction to Three Negro Classics, New York: Avon Books (1965), p. 17. The preface to Frederick Douglass states, "S. Laing Williams, of Chicago, Ill., and his wife, Fannie Barrier Williams, have been of incalculable service in the preparation of this volume. Mr. Williams enjoyed a long and intimate acquaintance with Mr. Douglass, and I have been privileged to draw heavily upon his fund of information. He and Mrs. Williams have reviewed this manuscript since its preparation and have given it their cordial approval." Reprinted and published by Argosy-Antiquarian LTD. (1969), p. 7.
- )
- ISBN 978-1-034-75027-7.
Primary sources
- Du Bois, W.E.B. (1903), "Chapter III. Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others", The Souls of Black Folk, Bartleby, archived from the original on August 11, 2020, retrieved October 14, 2020.
- Washington, Booker T. (September 1895), The Atlanta Cotton States Exposition Address, History Matters, GMU, archived from the original on January 27, 2006, retrieved February 6, 2007.
- ——— (September 1896), "The Awakening of the Negro", The Atlantic Monthly, 78, archived from the original on March 12, 2010, retrieved March 5, 2017
- ——— (1901). Up from Slavery: An Autobiography. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. Archived from the original on February 23, 2010. Retrieved October 31, 2009. Documenting the American South. Other online full-text versions available via Project Gutenberg Archived January 25, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, UNC Library Archived October 4, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
- ——— (October 1903), "The Fruits of Industrial Training", The Atlantic Monthly, vol. 92, archived from the original on July 27, 2020, retrieved May 14, 2020
- ——— (December 1906). "A Farmers' College on Wheels". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XIII: 8352–54. Retrieved July 10, 2009.)
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link - ——— (October 1910). "Chapters From My Experience I". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XX: 13505–22. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
- ——— (November 1910). "Chapters From My Experience II". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXI: 13627–40. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
- ——— (December 1910). "Chapters From My Experience III". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXI: 13784–94. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
- ——— (January 1911). "Chapters From My Experience IV". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXI: 13847–54. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
- ——— (February 1911). "Chapters From My Experience V". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXI: 14032–39. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
- ——— (April 1911). "Chapters From My Experience VI". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXI: 14230–38. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
- Washington, Booker T. Harlan, Louis R.; Blassingame, John W. (eds.). The Booker T. Washington Papers. University of Illinois Press. Fourteen-volume set of all letters to and from Booker T. Washington.
- Washington, Booker T. (1972a). "Volume 1:The Autobiographical Writings". In Harlan, Louis R.; Blassingame, John W. (eds.). The Booker T. Washington Papers. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-00242-7.
- Washington, Booker T. (1972b). "Volume 14: Cumulative Index". In Harlan, Louis R.; Blassingame, John W. (eds.). The Booker T. Washington Papers. University of Illinois Press. Archived from the original on August 18, 2006.
- Washington, Booker T. (1972a). "Volume 1:The Autobiographical Writings". In Harlan, Louis R.; Blassingame, John W. (eds.). The Booker T. Washington Papers. University of Illinois Press.
Secondary sources
- Anderson, James D. (1988), The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860–1935.
- (PDF) from the original on March 12, 2023, retrieved March 12, 2023.
- ISBN 978-0-465-01516-0.
- Dagbovie, Pero Gaglo (2010). African American History Reconsidered. Urbana. )
- Davies, Vanessa (2023), "Booker T. Washington's Challenge for Egyptology: African-Centered Research in the Nile Valley", Dotawo: A Journal of Nubian Studies, Miscellanea, from the original on April 5, 2023, retrieved April 5, 2023.
- JSTOR 2206948. Documents Booker T. Washington's secret financing and directing of litigation against segregation and disfranchisement.
- Harlan, Louis R. (1972), Booker T. Washington: volume 1: The Making of a Black Leader, 1856–1901, the major scholarly biography.
- Harlan, Louis R. (1983), Booker T. Washington; volume 2: The Wizard of Tuskegee 1901–1915.
- Heath, Robert L. "A time for silence: Booker T. Washington in Atlanta." Quarterly Journal of Speech 64.4 (1978): 385–399.
- JSTOR 2955315. Documents Booker T. Washington's secret financing and directing of litigation against segregation and disfranchisement.
- Moore, Jacqueline M. Booker T. Washington, WEB Du Bois, and the struggle for racial uplift (Rowman & Littlefield, 2003) online.
- Norrell, Robert J. (2003), "Booker T. Washington: Understanding the Wizard of Tuskegee", Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 42 (Winter): 96–109, JSTOR 3592453
- Norrell, Robert J. (2009), Up from History: The Life of Booker T. Washington, Belknap Press/Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-03211-8, favorable scholarly biography.
- S2CID 159805054.
Further reading
- Aiello, Thomas. The Battle for the Souls of Black Folk: WEB Du Bois, Booker T. Washington, and the Debate That Shaped the Course of Civil Rights (ABC-CLIO, 2016) online.
- Boston, Michael B. (2010), The Business Strategy of Booker T. Washington: Its Development and Implementation, University Press of Florida; 243 pp. Studies the content and influence of his philosophy of entrepreneurship.
- Chennault, Ronald E. "Pragmatism and Progressivism in the Educational Thought and Practices of Booker T. Washington." Philosophical Studies in Education 44 (2013): 121–131. online Archived March 7, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
- Christian, Mark. Booker T. Washington: A Life in American History (ABC-CLIO, 2021).
- Davis, Deborah. Guest of Honor: Booker T. Washington, Theodore Roosevelt, and the White House Dinner That Shocked a Nation (Simon and Schuster, 2012).
- Deutsch, Stephanie. You need a schoolhouse: Booker T. Washington, Julius Rosenwald, and the building of schools for the segregated south ( Northwestern University Press, 2011).
- Feiler, Andrew. A Better Life for the Children: Julius Rosenwald, Booker T. Washington, and the 4,978 Schools That Changed America (University of Georgia Press, 2021)
- Fisher, Laura R. "Head and Hands Together: Booker T. Washington's Vocational Realism." American Literature 87.4 (2015): 709–737.
- Gardner, Booker T. (1975). "The Educational Contributions of Booker T. Washington". The Journal of Negro Education. 44 (4): 502–518. JSTOR 2966635.
- Gibson, Donald B. (1993). "Strategies and Revisions of Self-Representation in Booker T. Washington's Autobiographies". American Quarterly. 45 (3): 370–393. JSTOR 2713239.
- Gottschalk, Jane (1966). "The Rhetorical Strategy of Booker T. Washington". Phylon. 27 (4): 388–395. JSTOR 273619.
- Smock, Raymond W., ed. (1988). Booker T. Washington in Perspective: Essays of Louis R. Harlan. University Press of Mississippi. JSTOR j.ctt2tvj64.
- Harlan, Louis R. (1966). "Booker T. Washington and the White Man's Burden". The American Historical Review. 71 (2): 441–467. JSTOR 1846341.
- Harlan, Louis R. (1988), Booker T. Washington in Perspective (essays), University Press of Mississippi.
- Jackson Jr, David H. "Booker T. Washington in South Carolina, March 1909." South Carolina Historical Magazine (2012): 192–220. online Archived February 22, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
- Lewis, Theodore. "Booker T. Washington’s audacious vocationalist philosophy." Oxford review of education 40.2 (2014): 189–205.
- Mathews, Basil Joseph, Booker T. Washington, educator and interracial interpreter (Harvard University Press, 1948)
- McMurry, Linda O. (1982), George Washington Carver, Scientist and Symbol
- Richards, Michael A. (October 2019). "Pathos, Poverty, and Politics: Booker T. Washington's Radically Reimagined American Civilization". Polity. 51 (4): 749–779. ISSN 0032-3497.
- Smith, David L. (1997), "Commanding Performance: Booker T. Washington's Atlanta Compromise Address", in Gerster, Patrick; Cords, Nicholas (eds.), Myth America: A Historical Anthology, vol. II, St. James, NY: Brandywine Press, ISBN 978-1881089971
- Smock, Raymond (2009), Booker T. Washington: Black Leadership in the Age of Jim Crow, Chicago: Ivan R Dee
- Verney, Kevern J. The art of the possible: Booker T. Washington and Black Leadership in the United States, 1881–1925 (Routledge, 2013).
- Webb, Clive. "‘A feeling which it is impossible for Englishmen to understand’: Booker T. Washington and Anglo-American Rivalries." History 107.376 (2022): 549–569.
- Weiss, Ellen. Robert R. Taylor and Tuskegee: An African American Architect Designs for Booker T. Washington (NewSouth Books, 2012).
- Wintz, Cary D.African American Political Thought, 1890–1930: Washington, Du Bois, Garvey, and Randolph (1996)
- Zimmerman, Andrew (2012), Alabama in Africa: Booker T. Washington, the German Empire, and the Globalization of the New South, Princeton: Princeton University Press
Historiography and memory
- Bieze, Michael Scott, and Marybeth Gasman, eds. Booker T. Washington Rediscovered (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012), 265 pp. scholarly essays
- Brundage, W. Fitzhugh, ed. (2003), Booker T. Washington and Black Progress: Up from Slavery 100 Years Later
- Carroll, Rebecca, ed. Uncle Tom or New Negro?: African Americans Reflect on Booker T. Washington and Up from Slavery 100 Years Later (Crown, 2013).
- Crowley, John W. "Booker T. Washington Revisited." American Literary Realism 54.2 (2022): 170–181. excerpt
- Dagbovie, Pero Gaglo (2007), "Exploring a Century of Historical Scholarship on Booker T. Washington", Journal of African American History, 92 (2): 239–264, S2CID 148770045
- Friedman, Lawrence J. (October 1974), "Life 'In the Lion's Mouth': Another Look at Booker T. Washington", Journal of Negro History, 59 (4): 337–351, S2CID 150075964
- Hamilton. Kenneth M. Booker T. Washington in American Memory (University of Illinois Press, 2017) online; see also online review
- Harlan, Louis R. (October 1970), "Booker T. Washington in Biographical Perspective", American Historical Review, 75 (6): 1581–1599, JSTOR 1850756
- Strickland, Arvarh E. (December 1973), "Booker T. Washington: The Myth and the Man", Reviews in American History (Review), 1 (4): 559–564, JSTOR 2701723
- Thornbrough, Emma Lou, ed. Booker T. Washington - Great Lives Observed (1969), short selections by Washington and by historians; online
- Zeringue, Joshua Thomas. "Booker T. Washington and the Historians: How Changing Views on Race Relations, Economics, and Education Shaped Washington Historiography, 1915–2010" (MA Thesis, LSU, 2015) online
External links
- Booker T. Washington National Monument
- Dr. Booker Taliaferro Washington at Tuskegee University
- "Writings of B. Washington and Du Bois" from C-SPAN's American Writers: A Journey Through History
- Booker T. Washington: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
- Booker T. Washington Papers Editorial Project collection at the University of Maryland Libraries
Online editions
- Works by or about Booker T. Washington at the Internet Archive
- Works by Booker T. Washington at Project Gutenberg
- Works by Booker T. Washington in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
- Works by Booker T. Washington at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)