Booker T. Washington Papers Volume 1: The Autobiographical Writings

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University of Illinois Press, 1972 - 509 strani
Here is the first of fifteen volumes in a project C. Vann Woodward called "the single most important research enterprise now under way in the field of American black history."

Volume 1 contains Washington's Up from Slavery, one of the most widely read American autobiographies, in addition to The Story of My Life and Work, and six other autobiographical writings. Together, the selections provide readers with a first step toward understanding Washington and his immense impact. These writings reveal the moral values he absorbed from his mid-nineteenth-century experiences and teachers. As importantly, they present him to the world as he wished to be seen: as the black version of the American success hero and an exemplar of the Puritan work ethic that he believed to be the secret of his success. These works, along with so much of Washington's writing, served as a model for many black Americans striving to overcome poverty and prejudice.

 

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Birth and Early Childhood
1
Boyhood in West Virginia
15
Life at Hampton Institute
20
How the First Six Years after Graduation from Hampton Were Spent
24
The Beginning of the Work at Tuskegee
28
The First Year at Tuskegee
31
The Struggles and Success of the Workers at Tuskegee from 1882 to 1884
36
The History of Tuskegee from 1884 to 1894
47
Up from Slavery 1901
211
Up from Slavery CONTENTS 1 A Slave among Slaves
215
Boyhood Days
226
The Struggle for an Education
236
Helping Others
247
The Reconstruction Period
256
Black Race and Red Race
263
Early Days at Tuskegee
271

Invited to Deliver a Lecture at Fisk University
61
The Speech at the Opening of the Cotton States Exposition and Incidents Connected Therewith
67
An Appeal for Justice
85
Honored by Harvard University
93
Urged for a Cabinet Position
102
The Shaw Monument Speech the Visit of Secretary James Wilson and the Letter to the Louisiana Convention
106
Cuban Education and the Chicago Peace Jubilee Address
118
The Visit of President William McKinley to Tuskegee
127
The Tuskegee Negro Conference
135
A Vacation in Europe
144
The West Virginia and Other Receptions after European
155
The Movement for a Permanent Endowment
164
A Description of the Work of the Tuskegee Institute
172
Origin and Work
180
Looking Backward
195
Teaching School in a Stable and a HenHouse
278
Anxious Days and Sleepless Nights
286
A Harder Task than Making Bricks without Straw
294
Making Their Beds before They Could Lie on Them
302
Raising Money
309
Two Thousand Miles for a FiveMinute Speech
319
The Atlanta Exposition Address
330
The Secret of Success in Public Speaking
341
xѴІ Europe
357
Last Words
371
A LETTER TO THE EDITORS OF THE Southern Workman
389
AN EXTRACT FROM THE PRIVILEGE OF SERVICE
398
INDEX
459
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O avtorju (1972)

Booker Taliaferro Washington, 1856 - 1915 Booker T. Washington was born a slave in Hales Ford, Virginia, near Roanoke. After the U.S. government freed all slaves in 1865, his family moved to Malden, West Virginia. There, Washington worked in coal mines and salt furnaces. He went on to attend the Hampton, Virginia Normal and Agricultural Institute from 1872-1875 before joining the staff in 1879. In 1881 he was selected to head the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, a new teacher-training school for blacks, which he transformed into a thriving institution, later named Tuskegee University. His controversial conviction that blacks could best gain equality in the U.S. by improving their economic situation through education rather than by demanding equal rights was termed the Atlanta Compromise, because Washington accepted inequality and segregation for blacks in exchange for economic advancement. Washington advised two Presidents, Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, on racial problems and policies, as well as influencing the appointment of several blacks to federal offices. Washington became a shrewd political leader and advised not only Presidents, but also members of Congress and governors. He urged wealthy people to contribute to various black organizations. He also owned or financially supported many black newspapers. In 1900, Washington founded the National Negro Business League to help black business firms. Washington fought silently for equal rights, but was eventually usurped by those who ideas were more radical and demanded more action. Washington was replaced by W. E. B. Du Bois as the foremost black leader of the time, after having spent long years listening to Du Bois deride him for his placation of the white man and the plight of the negro. He died in 1915.

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