Up From Slavery-Booker T. Washington
Up From Slavery-Booker T. Washington
Up From Slavery-Booker T. Washington
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
1901
SOURCE: WIKISOURCE
BY
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
AUTHOR OF "THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO"
NEW YORK
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO.
1901
COPYRIGHT, 1900, 1901,
BY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON.
Norwood Press
J. S. Cushing & Co.—Berwick & Smith
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
This volume is dedicated to my Wife
MRS. MARGARET JAMES WASHINGTON
And to my Brother
MR. JOHN H. WASHINGTON
Whose patience, fidelity, and hard work have gone far
to make the work at Tuskegee successful
CONTENTS
Chapter Page
Preface [This ToC entry not in original work] vii
I. A Slave among Slaves 1
II. Boyhood Days 23
III. The Struggle for an Education 42
IV. Helping Others 63
V. The Reconstruction Period 80
VI. Black Race and Red Race 92
VII. Early Days at Tuskegee 106
VIII. Teaching School in a Stable and a Hen-House 118
IX. Anxious Days and Sleepless Nights 133
X. A Harder Task than making Bricks without Straw 148
XI. Making their Beds before they could lie on them 163
XII. Raising Money 177
XIII. Two Thousand Miles for a Five Minute Speech 196
XIV. The Atlanta Exposition Address 217
XV. The Secret of Success in Public Speaking 238
XVI. Europe 267
XVII. Last Words 293
Index [This ToC entry not in original work] 321
PREFACE
CHAPTER I
A SLAVE AMONG SLAVES
FTER the coming of freedom there were two points upon which
A practically all the people on our place were agreed, and I find that this
was generally true throughout the South: that they must change their
names, and that they must leave the old plantation for at least a few days or
weeks in order that they might really feel sure that they were free.
In some way a feeling got among the coloured people that it was far from
proper for them to bear the surname of their former owners, and a great
many of them took other surnames. This was one of the first signs of free-
dom. When they were slaves, a coloured person was simply called "John"
or "Susan". There was seldom occasion for more than the use of the one
name. If "John" or "Susan" belonged to a white man by the name of "Hatch-
er," sometimes he was called "John Hatcher," or as often " Hatcher's John."
But there was a feeling that "John Hatcher" or " Hatcher's John" was not the
proper title by which to denote a freeman; and so in many cases "John
Hatcher" was changed to "John S. Lincoln" or "John S. Sherman," the ini-
tial "S" standing for no name, it being simply a part of what the coloured
man proudly called his "entitles."
As I have stated, most of the coloured people left the old plantation for a
short while at least, so as to be sure, it seemed, that they could leave and try
their freedom on to see how it felt. After they had remained away for a
time, many of the older slaves, especially, returned to their old homes and
made some kind of contract with their former owners by which they re-
mained on the estate.
My mother's husband, who was the stepfather of my brother John and
myself, did not belong to the same owners as did my mother. In fact, he sel-
dom came to our plantation. I remember seeing him there perhaps once a
year, that being about Christmas time. In some way, during the war, by run-
ning away and following the Federal soldiers, it seems, he found his way
into the new state of West Virginia. As soon as freedom was declared, he
sent for my mother to come to the Kanawha Valley, in West Virginia. At
that time a journey from Virginia over the mountains to West Virginia was
rather a tedious and in some cases a painful undertaking. What little cloth-
ing and few household goods we had were placed in a cart, but the children
walked the greater portion of the distance, which was several hundred
miles.
I do not think any of us ever had been very far from the plantation, and
the taking of a long journey into another state was quite an event. The part-
ing from our former owners and the members of our own race on the plan-
tation was a serious occasion. From the time of our parting till their death
we kept up a correspondence with the older members of the family, and in
later years we have kept in touch with those who were the younger mem-
bers. We were several weeks making the trip, and most of the time we slept
in the open air and did our cooking over a log fire out-of-doors. One night I
recall that we camped near an abandoned log cabin, and my mother decided
to build a fire in that for cooking, and afterward to make a "pallet" on the
floor for our sleeping. Just as the fire had gotten well started a large black
snake fully a yard and a half long dropped down the chimney and ran out on
the floor. Of course we at once abandoned that cabin. Finally we reached
our destination—a little town called Malden, which is about five miles from
Charleston, the present capital of the state.
At that time salt-mining was the great industry in that part of West Vir-
ginia, and the little town of Malden was right in the midst of the salt-fur-
naces. My stepfather had already secured a job at a salt-furnace, and he had
also secured a little cabin for us to live in. Our new house was no better
than the one we had left on the old plantation in Virginia. In fact, in one re-
spect it was worse. Notwithstanding the poor condition of our plantation
cabin, we were at all times sure of pure air. Our new home was in the midst
of a cluster of cabins crowded closely together, and as there were no sani-
tary regulations, the filth about the cabins was often intolerable. Some of
our neighbours were coloured people, and some were the poorest and most
ignorant and degraded white people. It was a motley mixture. Drinking,
gambling, quarrels, fights, and shockingly immoral practices were frequent.
All who lived in the little town were in one way or another connected with
the salt business. Though I was a mere child, my stepfather put me and my
brother at work in one of the furnaces. Often I began work as early as four
o'clock in the morning.
The first thing I ever learned in the way of book knowledge was while
working in this salt-furnace. Each salt-packer had his barrels marked with a
certain number. The number allotted to my stepfather was "18." At the close
of the day's work the boss of the packers would come around and put "18"
on each of our barrels, and I soon learned to recognize that figure wherever
I saw it, and after a while got to the point where I could make that figure,
though I knew nothing about any other figures or letters.
From the time that I can remember having any thoughts about anything, I
recall that I had an intense longing to learn to read. I determined, when
quite a small child, that, if I accomplished nothing else in life, I would in
some way get enough education to enable me to read common books and
newspapers. Soon after we got settled in some manner in our new cabin in
West Virginia, I induced my mother to get hold of a book for me. How or
where she got it I do not know, but in some way she procured an old copy
of Webster's "blue-back" spelling-book, which contained the alphabet, fol-
lowed by such meaningless words as "ab," "ba," "ca, "da." I began at once
to devour this book, and I think that it was the first one I ever had in my
hands. I had learned from somebody that the way to begin to read was to
learn the alphabet, so I tried in all the ways I could think of to learn it,—all
of course without a teacher, for I could find no one to teach me. At that time
there was not a single member of my race anywhere near us who could
read, and I was too timid to approach any of the white people. In some way,
within a few weeks, I mastered the greater portion of the alphabet. In all my
efforts to learn to read my mother shared fully my ambition, and sympa-
thized with me and aided me in every way that she could. Though she was
totally ignorant, so far as mere book knowledge was concerned, she had
high ambitions for her children, and a large fund of good, hard, common
sense which seemed to enable her to meet and master every situation, If I
have done anything in life worth attention, I feel sure that I inherited the
disposition from my mother.
In the midst of my struggles and longing for an education, a young
coloured boy who had learned to read in the state of Ohio came to Malden.
As soon as the coloured people found out that he could read, a newspaper
was secured, and at the close of nearly every day's work this young man
would be surrounded by a group of men and women who were anxious to
hear him read the news contained in the papers. How I used to envy this
man! He seemed to me to be the one young man in all the world who ought
to be satisfied with his attainments.
About this time the question of having some kind of a school opened for
the coloured children in the village began to be discussed by members of
the race. As it would be the first school for Negro children that had ever
been opened in that part of Virginia, it was, of course, to be a great event,
and the discussion excited the widest interest. The most perplexing question
was where to find a teacher. The young man from Ohio who had learned to
read the papers was considered, but his age was against him. In the midst of
the discussion about a teacher, another young coloured man from Ohio, who
had been a soldier, in some way found his way into town. It was soon
learned that he possessed considerable education, and he was engaged by
the coloured people to teach their first school. As yet no free schools had
been started for coloured people in that section, hence each family agreed to
pay a certain amount per month, with the understanding that the teacher was
to "board 'round"—that is, spend a day with each family. This was not bad
for the teacher, for each family tried to provide the very best on the day the
teacher was to be its guest. I recall that I looked forward with an anxious
appetite to the "teacher's day" at our little cabin.
This experience of a whole race beginning to go to school for the first
time, presents one of the most interesting studies that has ever occurred in
connection with the development of any race. Few people who were not
right in the midst of the scenes can form any exact idea of the intense desire
which the people of my race showed for an education. As I have stated, it
was a whole race trying to go to school. Few were too young, and none too
old, to make the attempt to learn. As fast as any kind of teachers could be
secured, not only were day-schools filled, but night-schools as well. The
great ambition of the older people was to try to learn to read the Bible be-
fore they died. With this end in view, men and women who were fifty or
seventy-five years old would often be found in the night-school. Sunday-
schools were formed soon after freedom, but the principal book studied in
the Sunday-school was the spelling-book. Day-school, night-school. Sun-
dayschool, were always crowded, and often many had to be turned away for
want of room.
The opening of the school in the Kanawha Valley, however, brought to
me one of the keenest disappointments that I ever experienced. I had been
working in a salt-furnace for several months, and my stepfather had discov-
ered that I had a financial value, and so, when the school opened, he decid-
ed that he could not spare me from my work. This decision seemed to cloud
my every ambition. The disappointment was made all the more severe by
reason of the fact that my place of work was where I could see the happy
children passing to and from school, mornings and afternoons. Despite this
disappointment, however, I determined that I would learn something, any-
way. I applied myself with greater earnestness than ever to the mastering of
what was in the "blue-back" speller.
My mother sympathized with me in my disappointment, and sought to
comfort me in all the ways she could, and to help me find a way to learn.
After a while I succeeded in making arrangements with the teacher to give
me some lessons at night, after the day's work was done. These night
lessons were so welcome that I think I learned more at night than the other
children did during the day. My own experiences in the night-school gave
me faith in the night-school idea, with which, in after years, I had to do both
at Hampton and Tuskegee. But my boyish heart was still set upon going to
the dayschool, and I let no opportunity slip to push my case. Finally I won,
and was permitted to go to the school in the day for a few months, with the
understanding that I was to rise early in the morning and work in the fur-
nace till nine o'clock, and return immediately after school closed in the af-
ternoon for at least two more hours of work.
The schoolhouse was some distance from the furnace, and as I had to
work till nine o'clock, and the school opened at nine, I found myself in a
difficulty. School would always be begun before I reached it, and some-
times my class had recited. To get around this difficulty I yielded to a temp-
tation for which most people, I suppose, will condemn me; but since it is a
fact, I might as well state it. I have great faith in the power and influence of
facts. It is seldome that anything is permannently gained by holding back a
fact. There was a large clock in a little office in the furnace. This clock, of
course, all the hundred or more workmen depended upon to regulate their
hours of beginning and ending the day's work. I got the idea that the way
for me to reach school on time was to move the clock hands from half-past
eight up to the nine o'clock mark. This I found myself doing morning after
morning, till the furnace "boss" discovered that something was wrong, and
locked the clock in a case. I did not mean to inconvenience anybody. I sim-
ply meant to reach that schoolhouse in time.
When, however, I found myself at the school for the first time, I also
found myself confronted with two other difficulties. In the first place, I
found that all of the other children wore hats or caps on their heads, and I
had neither hat nor cap. In fact, I do not remember that up to the time of go-
ing to school I had ever worn any kind of covering upon my head, nor do I
recall that either I or anybody else had even thought anything about the
need of covering for my head. But, of course, when I saw how all the other
boys were dressed, I began to feel quite uncomfortable. As usual, I put the
case before my mother, and she explained to me that she had no money with
which to buy a "store hat," which was a rather new institution at that time
among the members of my race and was considered quite the thing for
young and old to own, but that she would find a way to help me out of the
difficulty. She accordingly got two pieces of "homespun" (jeans) and sewed
them together, and I was soon the proud possessor of my first cap.
The lesson that my mother taught me in this has always remained with
me, and I have tried as best I could to teach it to others. I have always felt
proud, whenever I think of the incident, that my mother had strength of
character enough not to be led into the temptation of seeming to be that
which she was not—of trying to impress my schoolmates and others with
the fact that she was able to buy me a "store hat" when she was not. I have
always felt proud that she refused to go into debt for that which she did not
have the money to pay for. Since that time I have owned many kinds of
caps and hats, but never one of which I have felt so proud as of the cap
made of the two pieces of cloth sewed together by my mother. I have noted
the fact, but without satisfaction, I need not add, that several of the boys
who began their careers with "store hats" and who were my schoolmates
and used to join in the sport that was made of me because I had only a
"homespun" cap, have ended their careers in the penitentiary, while others
are not able now to buy any kind of hat.
My second difficulty was with regard to my name, or rather a name.
From the time when I could remember anything, I had been called simply
"Booker." Before going to school it had never occurred to me that it was
needful or appropriate to have an additional name. When I heard the school-
roll called, I noticed that all of the children had at least two names, and
some of them indulged in what seemed to me the extravagance of having
three. I was in deep perplexity, because I knew that the teacher would de-
mand of me at least two names, and I had only one. By the time the occa-
sion came for the enrolling of my name, an idea occurred to me which I
thought would make me equal to the situation; and so, when the teacher
asked me what my full name was, I calmly told him "Booker Washington,"
as if I had been called by that name all my life; and by that name I have
since been known. Later in my life I found that my mother had given me
the name of "Booker Taliaferro" soon after I was born, but in some way that
part of my name seemed to disappear and for a long while was forgotten,
but as soon as I found out about it I revived it, and made my full name
"Booker Taliaferro Washington." I think there are not many men in our
country who have had the privilege of naming themselves in the way that I
have.
More than once I have tried to picture myself in the position of a boy or
man with an honoured and distinguished ancestry which I could trace back
through a period of hundreds of years, and who had not only inherited a
name, but fortune and a proud family homestead; and yet I have sometimes
had the feeling that if I had inherited these, and had been a member of a
more popular race, I should have been inclined to yield to the temptation of
depending upon my ancestry and my colour to do that for me which I
should do for myself. Years ago I resolved that because I had no ancestry
myself I would leave a record of which my children would be proud, and
which might encourage them to still higher effort.
The world should not pass judgment upon the Negro, and especially the
Negro youth, too quickly or too harshly. The Negro boy has obstacles, dis-
couragements, and temptations to battle with that are little known to those
not situated as he is. When a white boy undertakes a task, it is taken for
granted that he will succeed. On the other hand, people are usually sur-
prised if the Negro boy does not fail. In a word, the Negro youth starts out
with the presumption against him.
The influence of ancestry, however, is important in helping forward any
individual or race, if too much reliance is not placed upon it. Those who
constantly direct attention to the Negro youth's moral weaknesses, and com-
pare his advancement with that of white youths, do not consider the influ-
ence of the memories which cling about the old family homesteads. I have
no idea, as I have stated elsewhere, who my grandmother was. I have, or
have had, uncles and aunts and cousins, but I have no knowledge as to
where most of them are. My case will illustrate that of hundreds of thou-
sands of black people in every part of our country. The very fact that the
white boy is conscious that, if he fails in life, he will disgrace the whole
family record, extending back through many generations, is of tremendous
value in helping him to resist temptations. The fact that the individual has
behind and surrounding him proud family history and connection serves as
a stimulus to help him to overcome obstacles when striving for success.
The time that I was permitted to attend school during the day was short,
and my attendance was irregular. It was not long before I had to stop attend-
ing day-school altogether, and devote all of my time again to work. I resort-
ed to the night-school again. In fact, the greater part of the education I se-
cured in my boyhood was gathered through the night-school after my day's
work was done. I had difficulty often in securing a satisfactory teacher.
Sometimes, after I had secured some one to teach me at night, I would find,
much to my disappointment, that the teacher knew but little more than I did.
Often I would have to walk several miles at night in order to recite my
night-school lessons. There was never a time in my youth, no matter how
dark and discouraging the days might be, when one resolve did not continu-
ally remain with me, and that was a determination to secure an education at
any cost.
Soon after we moved to West Virginia, my mother adopted into our fami-
ly, notwithstanding our poverty, an orphan boy, to whom afterward we gave
the name of James B. Washington. He has ever since remained a member of
the family.
After I had worked in the salt-furnace for some time, work was secured
for me in a coal-mine which was operated mainly for the purpose of secur-
ing fuel for the salt-furnace. Work in the coal-mine I always dreaded. One
reason for this was that any one who worked in a coal-mine was always un-
clean, at least while at work, and it was a very hard job to get one's skin
clean after the day's work was over. Then it was fully a mile from the open-
ing of the coal-mine to the face of the coal, and all, of course, was in the
blackest darkness. I do not believe that one ever experiences anywhere else
such darkness as he does in a coal-mine. The mine was divided into a large
number of different "rooms" or departments, and, as I never was able to
learn the location of all these "rooms," I many times found myself lost in
the mine. To add to the horror of being lost, sometimes my light would go
out, and then, if I did not happen to have a match, I would wander about in
the darkness until by chance I found some one to give me a light. The work
was not only hard, but it was dangerous. There was always the danger of
being blown to pieces by a premature explosion of powder, or of being
crushed by falling slate. Accidents from one or the other of these causes
were frequently occurring, and this kept me in constant fear. Many children
of the tenderest years were compelled then, as is now true I fear, in most
coal-mining districts, to spend a large part of their lives in these coal-mines,
with little opportunity to get an education; and, what is worse, I have often
noted that, as a rule, young boys who begin life in a coal-mine are often
physically and mentally dwarfed. They soon lose ambition to do anything
else than to continue as a coal-miner.
In those days, and later as a young man, I used to try to picture in my
imagination the feelings and ambitions of a white boy with absolutely no
limit placed upon his aspirations and activities. I used to envy the white boy
who had no obstacles placed in the way of his becoming a Congressman,
Governor, Bishop, or President by reason of the accident of his birth or
race. I used to picture the way that I would act under such circumstances;
how I would begin at the bottom and keep rising until I reached the highest
round of success.
In later years, I confess that I do not envy the white boy as T once did. 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 overcome while
trying to succeed. Looked at from this standpoint, I almost reach the con-
clusion that often the Negro boy's birth and connection with an unpopular
race is an advantage, so far as real life is concerned. With few exceptions,
the Negro youth must work harder and must perform his tasks even better
than a white youth in order to secure recognition. But out of the hard and
unusual struggle through which he is compelled to pass, he gets a strength,
a confidence, that one misses whose pathway is comparatively smooth by
reason of birth and race.
From any point of view, I had rather be what I am, a member of the Ne-
gro race, than be able to claim membership with the most favoured of any
other race. I have always been made sad when I have heard members of any
race claiming rights and privileges, or certain badges of distinction, on the
ground simply that they were members of this or that race, regardless of
their own individual worth or attainments. I have been made to feel sad for
such persons because I am conscious of the fact that mere connection with
what is knownvas a superior race will not permanently carry an individual
forward unless he has individual worth, and mere connection with what is
regarded as an inferior race will not finally hold an individual back if he
possesses intrinsic, individual merit. Every persecuted individual and race
should get much consola tion out of the great human law, which is universal
and eternal merit, no matter under what skin found, is, in the long run, rec-
ognized and rewarded. This I have said here, not to call attention to myself
as an individual, but to the race to which I am proud to belong.
CHAPTER III
THE STRUGGLE FOR AN EDUCATION
HE years from 1867 to 1878 I think may be called the period of Re-
T construction. This included the time that I spent as a student at Hamp-
ton and as a teacher in West Virginia. During the whole of the Recon-
struction period two ideas were constantly agitating the minds of the
coloured people, or, at least, the minds of a large part of the race. One of
these was the craze for Greek and Latin learning, and the other was a desire
to hold office.
It could not have been expected that a people who had spent generations
in slavery, and before that generations in the darkest heathenism, could at
first form any proper conception of what an education meant. In every part
of the South, during the Reconstruction period, schools, both day and night,
were filled to overflowing with people of all ages conditions, some being as
far along in age as sixty and seventy years. The ambition to secure an edu-
cation was most praiseworthy and encouraging. The idea, however, was too
prevalent that, as soon as one secured a little education, in some unexplain-
able way he would be free from most of the hardships of the world, and, at
any rate, could live without manual labour. There was a further feeling that
a knowledge, however little, of the Greek and Latin languages would make
one a very superior human being, something bordering almost on the super-
natural. I remember that the first coloured man whom I saw who knew
something about foreign languages impressed me at that time as being a
man of all others to be envied.
Naturally, most of our people who received some little education became
teachers or preachers. While among these two classes there were many ca-
pable, earnest, godly men and women, still a large proportion took up teach-
ing or preaching as an easy way to make a living. Many became teachers
who could do little more than write their names. I remember there came
into our neighbourhood one of this class, who was in search of a school to
teach, and the question arose while he was there as to the shape of the earth
and how he would teach the children concerning this subject. He explained
his position in the matter by saying that he was prepared to teach that the
earth was either flat or round, according to the preference of a majority of
his patrons.
The ministry was the profession that suffered most—and still suffers,
though there has been great improvement—on account of not only ignorant
but in many cases immoral men who claimed that they were "called to
preach." In the earlier days of freedom almost every coloured man who
learned to read would receive "a call to preach" within a few days after he
began reading. At my home in West Virginia the process of being called to
the ministry was a very interesting one. Usually the "call" came when the
individual was sitting in church. Without warning the one called would fall
upon the floor as if struck by a bullet, and would lie there for hours, speech-
less and motionless. Then the news would spread all through the neighbour-
hood that this individual had received a "call." If he were inclined to resist
the summons, he would fall or be made to fall a second or third time. In the
end he always yielded to the call. While I wanted an education badly, I con-
fess that in my youth I had a fear that when I had learned to read and write
well I would receive one of these "calls"; but, for some reason, my call nev-
er came.
When we add the number of wholly ignorant men who preached or "ex-
horted" to that of those who possessed something of an education, it can be
seen at a glance that the supply of ministers was large. In fact, some time
ago I knew a certain church that had a total membership of about two hun-
dred, and eighteen of that number were ministers. But, I repeat, in many
communities in the South the character of the ministry is being improved,
and I believe that within the next two or three decades a very large propor-
tion of the unworthy ones will have disappeared. The "calls" to preach, I am
glad to say, are not nearly so numerous now as they were formerly, and the
calls to some industrial occupation are growing more numerous. The im-
provement that has taken place in the character of the teachers is even more
marked than in the case of the ministers.
During the whole of the Reconstruction period our people throughout the
South looked to the Federal Government for everything, very much as a
child looks to its mother. This was not unnatural. The central government
gave them freedom, and the whole Nation had been enriched for more than
two centuries by the labour of the Negro. Even as a youth, and later in man-
hood, I had the feeling that it was cruelly wrong in the central government,
at the beginning of our freedom, to fail to make some provision for the gen-
eral education of our people in addition to what the states might do, so that
the people would be the better prepared for the duties of citizenship.
It is easy to find fault, to remark what might have been done, and per-
haps, after all, and under all the circumstances, those in charge of the con-
duct of affairs did the only thing that could be done at the time. Still, as I
look back now over the entire period of our freedom, I cannot help feeling
that it would have been wiser if some plan could have been put in operation
which would have made the possession of a certain amount of education or
property, or both, a test for the exercise of the franchise, and a way provided
by which this test should be made to apply honestly and squarely to both
the white and black races.
Though I was but little more than a youth during the period of Recon-
struction, I had the feeling that mistakes were being made, and that things
could not remain in the condition that they were in then very long. I felt that
the Reconstruction policy, so far as it related to my race, was in a large
measure on a false foundation, was artificial and forced. In many cases it
seemed to me that the ignorance of my race was being used as a tool with
which to help white men into office, and that there was an element in the
North which wanted to punish the Southern white men by forcing the Negro
into positions over the heads of the Southern whites. I felt that the Negro
would be the one to suffer for this in the end. Besides, the general political
agitation drew the attention of our people away from the more fundamental
matters of perfecting themselves in the industries at their doors and in se-
curing property.
The temptations to enter political life were so alluring that I came very
near yielding to them at one time, but I was kept from doing so by the feel-
ing that I would be helping in a more substantial way by assisting in the lay-
ing of the foundation of the race through a generous education of the hand,
head, and heart. I saw coloured men who were members of the state legisla-
tures, and county officers, who, in some cases, could not read or write, and
whose morals were as weak as their education. Not long ago, when passing
through the streets of a certain city in the South, I heard some brick-masons
calling out, from the top of a two-story brick building on which they were
working, for the "Governor" to "hurry up and bring up some more bricks."
Several times I heard the command, "Hurry up, Governor!" "Hurry up,
Governor!" My curiosity was aroused to such an extent that I made inquiry
as to who the "Governor" was, and soon found that he was a coloured man
who at one time had held the position of Lieutenant-Governor of his state.
But not all the coloured people who were in office during Reconstruction
were unworthy of their positions, by any means. Some of them, like the late
Senator B. K. Bruce, Governor Pinchback, and many others, were strong,
upright, useful men. Neither were all the class designated as carpetbaggers
dishonourable men. Some of the, like ex-Governor Bullock, of Georgia,
were men of high character and usefulness.
Of course the coloured people, so largely without education, and wholly
without experience in government, made tremendous mistakes, just as any
people similarly situated would have done. Many of the Southern whites
have a feeling that, if the Negro is permitted to exercise his political rights
now to any degree, the mistakes of the Reconstruction period will repeat
themselves. I do not think this would be true, because the Negro is a much
stronger and wiser man than he was thirty-five years ago, and he is fast
learning the lesson that he cannot afford to act in a manner that will alienate
his Southern white neighbours from him. More and more I am convinced
that the final solution of the political end of our race problem will be for
each state that finds it necessary to change the law bearing upon the fran-
chise to make the law apply with absolute honesty, and without opportunity
for double dealing or evasion, to both races alike. Any other course my dai-
ly observation in the South convinces me, will be unjust to the Negro, un-
just to the white man, and unfair to the rest of the states in the Union, and
will be, like slavery, a sin that at some time we shall have to pay for.
In the fall of 1878, after having taught school in Malden for two years,
and after I had succeeded in preparing several of the young men and
women, besides my two brothers, to enter the Hampton Institute, I decided
to spend some months in study at Washington, D.C. I remained there for
eight months. I derived a great deal of benefit from the studies which I pur-
sued, and I came into contact with some strong men and women. At the in-
stitution I attended there was no industrial training given to the students,
and I had an opportunity of comparing the influence of an institution with
no industrial training with that of one like the Hampton Institute, that em-
phasized the industries. At this school I found the students, in most cases,
had more money, were better dressed, wore the latest style of all manner of
clothing, and in some cases were more brilliant mentally. At Hampton it
was a standing rule that, while the institution would be responsible for se-
curing some one to pay the tuition for the students, the men and women
themselves must provide for their own board, books, clothing, and room
wholly by work, or partly by work and partly in cash. At the institution at
which I now was, I found that a large proportion of the students by some
means had their personal expenses paid for them. At Hampton the student
was constantly making the effort through the industries to help himself, and
that very effort was of immense value in character-building. The students at
the other school seemed to be less self-dependent, They seemed to give
more attention to mere outward appearances. In a word, they did not appear
to me to be beginning at the bottom, on a real, solid foundation, to the ex-
tent that they were at Hampton. They knew more about Latin and Greek
when they left school, but they seemed to know less about life and its con-
ditions as they would meet it at their homes. Having lived for a number of
years in the midst of comfortable surroundings, they were not as much in-
clined as the Hampton students to go into the country districts of the South,
where there was little of comfort, to work for our people, and they were
more inclined to yield to the temptation to become hotel waiters and Pull-
man-car porters as their life-work.
During the time I was a student in Washington the city was crowded with
coloured people, many of whom had recently come from the South. A large
proportion of these people had been drawn to Washington because they felt
that they could lead a life of ease there. Others had secured minor govern-
ment positions, and still another large class was there in the hope of secur-
ing Federal positions. A number of coloured men—some of them very
strong and brilliant—were in the House of Representatives at that time, and
one, the Hon. B. K. Bruce, was in the Senate. All this tended to make Wash-
ington an attractive place for members of the coloured race. Then, too, they
knew that at all times they could have the protection of the law in the Dis-
trict of Columbia. The public schools in Washington for coloured people
were better then than they were elsewhere. I took great interest in studying
the life of our people there closely at that time. I found that while among
them there was a large element of substantial, worthy citizens, there was
also a superficiality about the life of a large class that greatly alarmed me. I
saw young coloured men who were not earning more than four dollars a
week spend two dollars or more for a buggy on Sunday to ride up and down
Pennsylvania Avenue in, in order that they might try to convince the world
that they were worth thousands. I saw other young men who received sev-
enty-five or one hundred dollars per month from the Government, who were
in debt at the end of every month. I saw men who but a few months previ-
ous were members of Congress, then without employment and in poverty.
Among a large class there seemed to be a dependence upon the Government
for every conceivable thing. The members of this class had little ambition to
create a position for themselves, but wanted the Federal officials to create
one for them. How many times I wished then, and have often wished since,
that by some power of magic I might remove the great bulk of these people
into the country districts and plant them upon the soil, upon the solid and
never deceptive foundation of Mother Nature, where all nations and races
that have ever succeeded have gotten their start,—a start that at first may be
slow and toilsome, but one that nevertheless is real.
In Washington I saw girls whose mothers were earning their living by
laundrying. These girls were taught by their mothers, in rather a crude way
it is true, the industry of laundrying. Later, these girls entered the public
schools and remained there perhaps six or eight years. When the public-
school course was finally finished, they wanted more costly dresses, more
costly hats and shoes. In a word, while their wants had been increased, their
ability to supply their wants had not been increased in the same degree. On
the other hand, their six or eight years of book education had weaned them
away from the occupation of their mothers. The result of this was in too
many cases that the girls went to the bad. I often thought how much wiser it
would have been to give these girls the same amount of mental training—
and I favour any kind of training, whether in the languages or mathematics,
that gives strength and culture to the mind—but at the same time to give
them the most thorough training in the latest and best methods of laundry-
ing and other kindred occupations.
CHAPTER VI
BLACK RACE AND RED RACE
URING the year that I spent in Washington, and for some little
D time before this, there had been considerable agitation in the state of
West Virginia over the quesiton of moving the capital of the state
from Wheeling to some other central point. As a result of this, the Legisla-
ture designated three cities to be voted upon by the citizens of the state as
the permanent seat of government. Among these cities was Charleston, only
five miles from Malden, my home. At the close of my school year in Wash-
ington I was very pleasantly surprised to receive, from a committee of white
people in Charleston, an invitation to canvass the state in the interests of
that city. This invitation I accepted, and spent nearly three months in speak-
ing in various parts of the state. Charleston was successful in winning the
prize, and is now the permanent seat of government.
The reputation that I made as a speaker during this campaign induced a
number of person to make an earnest effort to get me to enter political life,
but I refused, still believing that I could find other service which would
prove of more permanent value to my race. Even then I had a strong feeling
that what our people most needed was to get a foundation in education, in-
dustry, and property, and for this I felt that they could better afford to strive
than for political preferment. As for my individual self, it appeared to me to
be reasonably certain that I could succeed in political life, but I had a feel-
ing that it would be a rather selfish kind of success—individual success at
the cost of failing to do my duty in assisting in laying a foundation for the
masses.
At this period in the progress of our race a very large proportion of the
young men who went to school or to college did so with the expressed de-
termination to prepare themselves to be great lawyers, or Congressmen, and
many of the women planned to become music teachers, but I had a reason-
ably fixed idea, even at that early period in my life, that there was need for
something to be done to prepare the way for successful lawyers, Congress-
men, and music teachers.
I felt that the conditions were a good deal like those of an old coloured
man, during the days of slavery, who wanted to learn how to play on the
guitar. In his desire to take guitar lessons he applied to one of his young
masters to teach him; but the young man, not having much faith in the abili-
ty of the slave to master the guitar at his age, sought to discourage him by
telling him: "Uncle Jake, I will give you guitar lessons; but, Jake, I will
have to charge you three dollars for the first lesson, two dollars for the sec-
ond lesson, and one dollar for the third lesson. But I will charge you only
twenty-five cents for the last lesson."
Uncle Jake answered: "All right, boss, I hires you on dem terms. But,
boss! I wants yer to be sure an' give me dat las' lesson first."
Soon after my work in connection with the removal of the capital was
finished, I received an invitation which gave me great joy and which at the
same time was a very pleasant surprise. This was a letter from General
Armstrong, inviting me to return to Hampton at the next Commencement to
deliver what was called the "post-graduate address." This was an honour
which I had not dreamed of receiving. With much care I prepared the best
address that I was capable of. I chose for my subject "The Force That
Wins."
As I returned to Hampton for the purpose of delivering this address, I
went over much of the same ground—now, however, covered entirely by
railroad—that I had traversed nearly six years before, when I first sought
entrance into Hampton Institute as a student. Now I was able to ride the
whole distance in the train. I was constantly contrasting this with my first
journey to Hampton. I think I may say, without seeming egotism, that it is
seldom that five years have wrought such a change in the life and aspira-
tions of an individual.
At Hampton I received a warm welcome from teachers and students. I
found that during my absence from Hampton the institute each year had
been getting closer to the real needs and conditions of our people; that the
industrial teaching, as well as that of the academic department, had greatly
improved. The plan of the school was not modelled after that of any other
institution then in existence, but every improvement was made under the
magnificent leadership of General Armstrong solely with the view of meet-
ing and helping the needs of our people as they presented themselves at the
time. Too often, it seems to me, in missionary and educational work among
undeveloped races, people yield to the temptation of doing that which was
done a hundred years before, or is being done in other communities a thou-
sand miles away. The temptation often is to run each individual through a
certain educational mould, regardless of the condition of the subject or the
end to be accomplished. This was not so at Hampton Institute.
The address which I delivered on Commencement Day seems to have
pleased every one, and many kind and encouraging words were spoken to
me regarding it. Soon after my return to my home in West Virginia, where I
had planned to continue teaching, I was again surprised to receive a letter
from General Armstrong, asking me to return to Hampton partly as a
teacher and partly to pursue some supplementary studies. This was in the
summer of 1879. Soon after I began my first teaching in West Virginia I had
picked out four of the brightest and most promising of my pupils, in addi-
tion to my two brothers, to whom I have already referred, and had given
them special attention, with the view of having them go to Hampton. They
had gone there, and in each case the teachers had found them so well pre-
pared that they entered advanced classes. This fact, it seems, led to my be-
ing called back to Hampton as a teacher. One of the young men that I sent
to Hampton in this way is now Dr. Samuel E. Courtney, a successful physi-
cian in Boston, and a member of the School Board of that city.
About this time the experiment was being tried for the first time, by Gen-
eral Armstrong, of educating Indians at Hampton. Few people then had any
confidence in the ability of the Indians to receive education and to profit by
it. General Armstrong was anxious to try the experiment systematically on a
large scale. He secured from the reservations in the Western states over one
hundred wild and for the most part perfectly ignorant Indians, the greater
proportion of whom were young men. The special work which the General
desired me to do was to be a sort of "house father" to the Indian young men
—that is, I was to live in the building with them and have the charge of
their discipline, clothing, rooms, and so on. This was a very tempting offer,
but I had become so much absorbed in my work in West Virginia that I
dreaded to give it up. However, I tore myself away from it. I did not know
how to refuse to perform any service that General Armstrong desired of me.
On going to Hampton, I took up my residence in a building with about
seventy-five Indian youths. I was the only person in the building who was
not a member of their race. At first I had a good deal of doubt about my
ability to succeed. I knew that the average Indian felt himself above the
white man, and, of course, he felt himself far above the Negro, largely on
account of the fact of the Negro having submitted to slavery—a thing which
the Indian would never do. The Indians, in the Indian Territory, owned a
large number of slaves during the days of slavery. Aside from this, there
was a general feeling that the attempt to educate failure. All this made me
proceed very cautiously, for I felt keenly the great responsibility. But I was
determined to succeed. It was not long before I had the complete confidence
of the Indians, and not only this, but I think I am safe in saying that I had
their love and respect. I found that they were about like any other human
beings; that they responded to kind treatment and resented ill-treatment.
They were continually planning to do something that would add to my hap-
piness and comfort. The things that they disliked most, I think, were to have
their long hair cut, to give up wearing their blankets, and to cease smoking;
but no white American ever thinks that any other race is wholly civilized
until he wears the white man's clothes, eats the white man's food, speaks the
white man's language, and professes the white man's religion.
When the difficulty of learning the English language was subtracted, I
found that in the matter of learning trades and in mastering academic stud-
ies there was little difference between the coloured and Indian students. It
was a constant delight to me to note the interest which the coloured students
took in trying to help the Indians in every way possible. There were a few
of the coloured students who felt that the Indians ought not to be admitted
to Hampton, but these were in the minority. Whenever they were asked to
do so, the Negro students gladly took the Indians as room-mates, in order
that they might teach them to speak English and to acquire civilized habits.
I have often wondered if there was a white institution in this country
whose students would have welcomed the incoming of more than a hundred
companions of another race in the cordial way that these black students at
Hampton welcomed the red ones. How often I have wanted to say to white
students that they lift themselves up in proportion as they help to lift others,
and the more unfortunate the race, and the lower in the scale of civilization,
the more does one raise one's self by giving the assistance.
This reminds me of a conversation which I once had with the Hon. Fred-
erick Douglass. At one time Mr. Douglass was travelling in the state of
Pennsylvania, and was forced, on account of his colour, to ride in the bag-
gage-car, in spite of the fact that he had paid the same price for his passage
that the other passengers had paid. When some of the white passengers
went into the baggage-car to console Mr. Douglass, and one of them said to
him: "I am sorry, Mr. Douglass, that been degraded in this manner," Mr.
Douglass straightened himself up on the box upon which he was sitting, and
replied: "They cannot degrade Frederick Douglass. The soul that is within
me no man can degrade. I am not the one that is being degraded on account
of this treatment, but those who are inflicting it upon me."
In one part of our country, where the law demands the separation of the
races on the railroad trains, I saw at one time a rather amusing instance
which showed how difficult it sometimes is to know where the black begins
and the white ends.
There was a man who was well known in his community as a Negro, but
who was so white that even an expert would have hard work to classify him
as a black man. This man was riding in the part of the train set aside for the
coloured passengers. When the train conductor reached him, he showed at
once that he was perplexed. If the man was a Negro, the conductor did not
want to send him into the white people's coach; at the same time, if he was a
white man, the conductor did not want to insult him by asking him if he was
a Negro. The official looked him over carefully, examining his hair, eyes,
nose, and hands, but still seemed puzzled. Finally, to solve the difficulty, he
stooped over and peeped at the man's feet. When I saw the conductor exam-
ining the feet of the man in question, I said to myself, "That will settle it;"
and so it did, for the trainman promptly decided that the passenger was a
Negro, and let him remain where he was. I congratulated myself that my
race was fortunate in not losing one of its members.
My experience has been that the time to test a true gentleman is to ob-
serve him when he is in contact with individuals of a race that is less fortu-
nate than his own. This is illustrated in no better way than by observing the
conduct of the old-school type of Southern gentleman when he is in contact
with his former slaves or their descendants.
An example of what I mean is shown in a story told of George Washing-
ton, who, meeting a coloured man in the road once, who politely lifted his
hat, lifted his own in return. Some of his white friends who saw the incident
criticised Washington for his action. In reply to their criticism George
Washington said: "Do you suppose that I am going to permit a poor, igno-
rant, coloured man to be more polite than I am?"
While I was in charge of the Indian boys at Hampton, I had one or two
experiences which illustrate the curious workings of caste in America. One
of the Indian boys was taken ill, and it became my duty to take him to
Washington, deliver him over to the Secretary of the Interior, and get a re-
ceipt for him, in order that he might be returned to his Western reservation.
At that time I was rather ignorant of the ways of the world. During my jour-
ney to Washington, on a steamboat, when the bell rang for dinner, I was
careful to wait and not enter the dining room until after the greater part of
the passengers had finished their meal. Then, with my charge, I went to the
dining saloon. The man in charge politely informed me that the Indian
could be served, but that I could not. I never could understand how he knew
just where to draw the colour line, since the Indian and I were of about the
same complexion. The steward, however, seemed to be an expert in this
matter. I had been directed by the authorities at Hampton to stop at a certain
hotel in Washington with my charge, but when I went to this hotel the clerk
stated that he would be glad to receive the Indian into the house, but said
that he could not accommodate me. An illustration of something of this
same feeling came under my observation afterward. I happened to find my-
self in a town in which so much excitement and indignation were being ex-
pressed that it seemed likely for a time that there would be a lynching. The
occasion of the trouble was that a dark-skinned man had stopped at the local
hotel. Investigation, however, developed the fact that this individual was a
citizen of Morocco, and that while travelling in this country he spoke the
English language. As soon as it was learned that he was not an American
Negro, all the signs of indignation disappeared. The man who was the inno-
cent cause of the excitement, though, found it prudent after that not to speak
English.
At the end of my first year with the Indians there came another opening
for me at Hampton, which, as I look back over my life now, seems to have
come providentially, to help to prepare me for my work at Tuskegee later.
General Armstrong had found out that there was quite a number of young
coloured men and women who were intensely in earnest in wishing to get
an education, but who were prevented from entering Hampton Institute be-
cause they were too poor to be able pay any portion of the cost of their
board, or even to supply themselves with books. He conceived the idea of
starting a night-school in connection with the Institute, into which a limited
number of the most promising of these young men and women would be
received, on condition that they were to work for ten hours during the day,
and attend school for two hours at night. They were to be paid something
above the cost of their board for their work. The greater part of their earn-
ings was to be reserved in the school's treasury as a fund to be drawn on to
pay their board when they had become students in the day-school, after they
had spent one or two years in the night-school. In this way they would ob-
tain a start in their books and a knowledge of some trade or industry, in ad-
dition to the other far-reaching benefits of the institution.
General Armstrong asked me to take charge of the night-school, and I did
so. At the beginning of this school there were about twelve strong, earnest
men and women who entered the class. During the day the greater part of
the young men worked in the school's sawmill, and the young women
worked in the laundry. The work was not easy in either place, but in all my
teaching I never taught pupils who gave me such genuine satisfaction as
these did. They were good students, and mastered their work thoroughly.
They were so much in earnest that only the ringing of the retiring-bell
would make them stop studying, and often they would urge me to continue
the lessons after the usual hour for going to bed had come.
These students showed so much earnestness, both in their hard work dur-
ing the day, as well as in their application to their studies at night, that gave
them the name of "The Plucky Class"—a name which soon grew popular
and spread throughout the institution. After a student had been in the night-
school long enough to prove what was in him, I gave him a printed certifi-
cate which read something like this:—
"This is to certify that James Smith is a member of The Plucky Class of
the Hampton Institute, and is in good and regular standing."
The students prized these certificates highly, and they added greatly to
the popularity of the night-school. Within a few weeks this department had
grown to such an extent that there were about twenty-five students in atten-
dance. I have followed the course of many of these twenty-five men and
women ever since then, and they are now holding important and useful po-
sitions in nearly every part of the South. The night-school at Hampton,
which started with only twelve students, now numbers between three and
four hundred, and is one of the permanent and most important features of
the institution.
CHAPTER VII
EARLY DAYS AT TUSKEGEE
URING the time that I had charge of the Indians and the the night-
D school at Hampton, I pursued some studies myself, under the direc-
tion of the instructors there. One of these instructors was the Rev. Dr.
H. B. Frissell, the present Principal of the Hampton Institute, General Arm-
strong's successor.
In May, 1881, near the close of my first year in teaching the night-school,
in a way that I had not dared expect, the opportunity opened for me to begin
my life-work. One night in the chapel, after the usual chapel exercises were
over, General Armstrong referred to the fact that he had received a letter
from some gentleman in Alabama asking him to recommend some one to
take charge of what was to be a normal school for the coloured people in
the little town of Tuskegee in that state. These gentlemen seemed to take it
for granted that no coloured man suitable for the position could be secured,
and they were expecting the General to recommend a white man for the
place. The next day General Armstrong sent for me to come to his office,
and, much to my surprise, asked me if I thought I could fill the position in
Alabama. I told him that I would be willing to try. Accordingly, he wrote to
the people who had applied to him for the information, that he did not know
of any white man to suggest, but if they would be willing to take a coloured
man, he had one whom he could recommend. In this letter he gave them my
name.
Several days passed before anything more was heard about the matter.
Some time afterward, one Sunday evening during the chapel exercises, a
messenger came in and handed the General a telegram. At the end of the
exercises he read the telegram to the school. In substance, these were its
words: "Booker T. Washington will suit us. Send him at once."
There was a great deal of joy expressed among the students and teachers,
and I received very hearty congratulations. I began to get ready at once to
go to Tuskegee. I went by way of my old home in West Virginia, where I
remained for several days, after which I proceeded to Tuskegee. I found
Tuskegee to be a town of about two thousand inhabitants, nearly one-half of
whom were coloured. It was in what was known as the Black Belt of the
South. In the county in which Tuskegee is situated the coloured people out-
numbered the whites by about three to one. In some of the adjoining and
near-by counties the proportion was far from six coloured persons to one
white.
I have often been asked to define the term "Black Belt." So far as I can
learn, the term was first used to designate a part of the country which was
distinguished by the colour of the soil. The part of the country possessing
this thick, dark, and naturally rich soil was, of course, the part of the South
where the slaves were most profitable, and consequently they were taken
there in the largest numbers. Later, and especially since the war, the term
seems to be used wholly in a political sense—that is, to designate the coun-
ties where the black people outnumber the white.
Before going to Tuskegee I had expected to find there a building and all
the necessary apparatus ready for me to begin teaching. To my disappoint-
ment, I found nothing of the kind. I did find, though, that which no costly
building and apparatus can supply,—hundreds of hungry, earnest souls who
wanted to secure knowledge.
Tuskegee seemed an ideal place for the school. It was in the midst of the
great bulk of the Negro population, and was rather secluded, being five
miles from the main line of railroad, with which it was connected by a short
line. During the days of slavery, and since, the town had been a centre for
the education of the white people. This was an added advantage, for the rea-
son that I found the white people possessing a degree of culture and educa-
tion that is not suprassed by many localities. While the coloured people
were ignorant, they had not, as a rule, degraded and weakened their bodies
by vices such as are common to the lower class of people in the large cities.
In general, I found the relations between the two races pleasant. For exam-
ple, the largest, and I think at that time the only hardware store in the town
was owned and operated jointly by a coloured man and a white man. This
copartnership continued until the death of the white partner.
I found that about a year previous to my going to Tuskegee some of the
coloured people who had heard something of the work of education being
done at Hampton had applied to the state Legislature, through their repre-
sentatives, for a small appropriation to be used in starting a normal school
in Tuskegee. This request the Legislature had complied with to the extent of
granting an annual appropriation of two thousand dollars. I soon learned,
however, that this money could be used only for the payment of the salaries
of the instructors, and that there was no provision for securing land, build-
ings, or apparatus. The task before me did not seem a very encouraging one.
It seemed much like making bricks without straw. The coloured people
were overjoyed, and were constantly offering their services in any way in
which they could be of assistance in getting the school started.
My first task was to find a place in which to open the school. After look-
ing the town over with some care, the most suitable place that could be se-
cured seemed to be a rather dilapidated shanty near the coloured Methodist
church, together with the church itself as a sort of assembly-room. Both the
church and the shanty were in about as bad condition as was possible. I re-
call that during the first months of school that I taught in this building it was
in such poor repair that, whenver it rained, one of the older students would
very kindly leave his lessons and hold an umbrella over me while I heard
the recitations of the others. I remember, also, that on more than one occa-
sion my landlady held an umbrella over me while I ate breakfast.
At the time I went to Alabama the coloured people were taking consider-
able interest in politics, and they were very anxious that I should become
one of them politically, in every respect. They seemed to have a little dis-
trust of strangers in this regard. I recall that one man, who seemed to have
been designated by the others to look after my political destiny, came to me
on several occasions and said, with a good deal of earnestness: "We wants
you to be sure to vote jes' like we votes. We can't read de newspapers very
much, but we knows how to vote, an' we wants you to vote jes' like we
votes." He added: "We watches de white man, and we keeps watching de
white man till we finds out which way de white man's gwine to vote; an'
when we finds out which way de white man's gwine to vote, den we votes
'xactly de other way. Den we knows we's right."
I am glad to add, however, that at the present time the disposition to vote
against the white man merely because he is white is largely disappearing,
and the race is learning to vote from principle, for what the voter considers
to be for the best interests of both races.
I reached Tuskegee, as I have said, early in June, 1881. The first month I
spent in finding accommodations for the school, and in travelling through
Alabama, examining into the actual life of the people, especially in the
country districts, and in getting the school advertised among the class of
people that I wanted to have attend it. The most of my travelling was done
over the country roads, with a mule and a cart or a mule and a buggy wagon
for conveyance. I ate and slept with the people, in their little cabins. I saw
their farms, their schools, their churches. Since, in the case of the most of
these visits, there had been no notice given in advance that a stranger was
expected, I had the advantage of seeing the real, everyday life of the people.
In the plantation districts I found that, as a rule, the whole family slept in
one room, and that in addition to the immediate family there sometimes
were relatives, or others not related to the family, who slept in the same
room. On more than one occasion I went outside the house to get ready for
bed, or to wait until the family had gone to bed. They usually contrived
some kind of a place for me to sleep, either on the floor or in a special part
of another's bed. Rarely was there any place provided in the cabin where
one could bathe even the face and hands, but usually some provision was
made for this outside the house, in the yard.
The common diet of the people were fat port and corn bread. At times I
have eaten in cabins where they had only corn bread and "black-eye peas"
cooked in plain water. The people seemed to have no other idea than to live
on this fat meat and corn bread,—the meat, and the meal of which the bread
was made, having been bought at a high price at a store in town, not-
withstanding the fact that the land all about the cabin homes could easily
have been made to produce nearly every kind of garden vegetable that is
raised anywhere in the country. Their one object seemed to be to plant noth-
ing but cotton; and in many cases cotton was planted up to the very door of
the cabin.
In these cabin homes I often found sewing-machines which had been
bought, or were being bought, on instalments, frequently at a cost of as
much as sixty dollars, or showy clocks for which the occupants of the cab-
ins had paid twelve or fourteen dollars. I remember than on one occasion
when I went into one of these cabins for dinner, when I sat down to the ta-
ble for a meal with the four members of the family, I noticed that, while
there were five of us at the table, there was but one fork for the five of us to
use. Naturally there was an awkward pause on my part. In the opposite cor-
ner of that same cabin was an organ for which the people told me they were
paying sixty dollars in monthly instalments. One fork, and a sixty-dollar
organ!
In most cases the sewing-machine was not used, the clocks were so
worthless that they did not keep correct time—and if they had, in nine cases
out of ten there would have been no one in the family who could have told
the time of day—while the organ, of course, was rarely used for want of a
person who could play upon it.
In the case to which I have referred, where the family sat down to the ta-
ble for the meal at which I was their guest, I could see plainly that this was
an awkward and unusual proceeding, and was done in my honour. In most
cases, when the family got up in the morning, for example, the wife would
put a piece of meat in a frying-pan and put a lump of dough in a "skillet," as
they called it. These utensils would be placed on the fire, and in ten or fif-
teen minutes breakfast would be ready. Frequently the husband would take
his bread and meat in his hand and start for the field, eating as he walked.
The mother would sit down in a corner and eat her breakfast, perhaps from
a plate and perhaps directly from the "skillet" or frying-pan, while the chil-
dren would eat their portion of the bread and meat while running about the
yard. At certain seasons of the year, when meat was scarce, it was rarely
that the children who were not old enough or strong enough to work in the
fields would have the luxury of meat.
The breakfast over, and with practically no attention given to the house,
the whole family would, as a general thing, proceed to the cotton-field.
Every child that was large enough to carry a hoe was put to work, and the
baby—for usually there was at least one baby—would be laid down at the
end of the cotton row, so that its mother could give it a certain amount of
attention when she finished chopping her row. The noon meal and the sup-
per were taken in much the same way as the breakfast.
All the days of the family would be spent after much this same routine,
except Saturday and Sunday. On Saturday the whole family would spend at
least half a day, and often a whole day, in town. The idea in going to town
was, I suppose, to do shopping, but all the shopping that the whole family
had money for could have been attended to in ten minutes by one person.
Still, the whole family remained in town for most of the day, spending the
greater part of the time in standing on the streets, the women, too often, sit-
ting about somewhere smoking or dipping snuff. Sunday was usually spent
in going to some big meeting. With few exceptions, I found that the crops
were mortgaged in the counties where I went, and that the most of the
coloured farmers were in debt. The state had not been able to build school-
houses in the country districts, and as a rule, the schools were taught in
churches or in log cabins. More than once, while on my journeys, I found
that there was no provision made in the house used for school purposes for
heating the building during the winter, and consequently a fire had to be
built in the yard, and teacher and pupils passed in and out of the house as
they got cold or warm. With few exceptions, I found the teachers in these
country schools to be miserably poor in preparation for their work, and poor
in moral character. The schools were in session from three to five months.
There was practically no apparatus in the schoolhouses, except that occa-
sionally there was a rough blackboard. I recall that one day I went into a
schoolhouse—or rather into an abandoned log cabin that was being used as
a schoolhouse—and found five pupils who were studying a lesson from one
book. Two of these, on the front seat, were using the book between them;
behind these were two others peeping over the shoulders of the first two,
and behind the four was a fifth little fellow who was peeping over the
shoulders of all four.
What I have said concerning the character of the schoolhouses and teach-
ers will also apply quite accurately as a description of the church buildings
and the ministers.
I met some very interesting characters during my travels. As illustrating
the peculiar mental processes of the country people, I remember that I asked
one coloured man, who was about sixty year old, to tell me something of
his history. He said that he had been born in Virginia, and sold into Alaba-
ma in 1845. I asked him how many were sold at the same time. He said,
"There were five of us; myself and brother and three mules."
In giving all these descriptions of what I saw during my month of travel
in the country around Tuskegee, I wish my reader to keep in mind the fact
that there were many encouraging exceptions to the conditions which I have
described. I have stated in such plain words what I saw, mainly for the rea-
son that later I want to emphasize the encouraging changes that have taken
place in the community, not wholly by the work of the Tuskegee school, but
by that of other institutions as well.
CHAPTER VIII
TEACHING SCHOOL IN A STABLE AND A HEN-HOUSE
About three months after the opening of the school, and at the time when
we were in greatest anxiety about our work, there came into the market for
sale an old and abandoned plantation which was situated about a mile from
the town of Tuskegee. The mansion house—or "big house," as it would
have been called—which had been occupied by the owners during slavery,
had been burned. After making a careful examination of this place, it
seemed to be just the location that we wanted in order to make our work ef-
fective and permanent.
But how were we to get it? The price asked for it was very little—only
five hundred dollars—but we had no money, and we were strangers in the
town and had no credit. The owner of the land agreed to let us occupy the
place it we could make a payment of two hundred and fifty dollars down,
with the understanding that the remaining two hundred and fifty dollars
must be paid within a year. Although five hundred dollars was cheap for the
land, it was a large sum when one did not have any part of it.
In the midst of the difficulty I summoned a great deal of courage and
wrote to my friend General J. F. B. Marshall, the Treasurer of the Hampton
Institute, putting the situation before him and beseeching him to lend me the
two hundred and fifty dollars on my own personal responsibility. Within a
few days a reply came to the effect that he had no authority to lend me mon-
ey belonging to the Hampton Institute, but that he would gladly lend me the
amount needed from his own personal funds.
I confess that the securing of this money in this way was a great surprised
to me, as well as a source of gratification. Up to that time I never had had in
my possession so much money as one hundred dollars at a time, and the
loan which I had asked General Marshall for seemed a tremendously large
sum to me. The fact of my being responsible for the repaying of such a
large amount of money weighed very heavily upon me.
I lost no time in getting ready to move the school on to the new farm. At
the time we occupied the place there were standing upon it a cabin, former-
ly used as the dining room, an old kitchen, a stable, and an old hen-house.
Within a few weeks we had all of these structures in use. The stable was re-
paired and used as a recitation-room, and very presently the hen-house was
utilized for the same purpose.
I recall that one morning, when I told an old coloured man who lived
near, and who sometimes helped me, that our school had grown so large
that it would be necessary for us to use the hen-house for school purposes,
and that I wanted him to help me give it a thorough cleaning out the next
day, he replied, in the most earnest manner: "What you mean, boss? You
sholy ain't gwine clean out de hen-house in de day-time?"
Nearly all the work of getting the new location ready for school purposes
was done by the students after school was over in the afternoon. As soon as
we got the cabins in condition to be used, I determined to clear up some
land so that we could plant a crop. When I explained my plan to the young
men, I noticed that they did not seems to take to it very kindly. It was hard
for them to see the connection between clearing land and an education. Be-
sides, many of them had been school-teachers, and they questioned whether
or not clearing land would be in keeping with their dignity. In order to re-
lieve them from any embarrassment, each afternoon after school I took my
axe and led the way to the woods. When they saw that I was not afraid or
ashamed to work, they began to assist with more enthusiasm. We kept at the
work each afternoon, until we had cleared about twenty acres and had plant-
ed a crop.
In the meantime Miss Davidson was devising plans to repay the loan. Her
first effort was made by holding festivals, or "suppers." She made a person-
al canvass among the white and coloured families in the town of Tuskegee,
and got them to agree to give something, like a cake, a chicken, bread, or
pies, that could be sold at the festival. Of course the coloured people were
glad to give anything that they could spare, but I want to add that Miss
Davidson did not apply to a single white family, so far as I now remember,
that failed to donate something; and in many ways the white families
showed their interest in the school.
Several of these festivals were held, and quite a little sum of the money
was raised. A canvass was also made among the people of both races for
direct gifts of money, and most of those applied to gave small sums. It was
often pathetic to note the gifts of the older coloured people, most of whom
had spent their best days in slavery. Sometimes they would give five cents,
sometimes twenty-five cents. Sometimes the contribution was a quilt, or a
quantity of sugarcane. I recall one old coloured woman, who was about sev-
enty years of age, who came to see me when we were raising money to pay
for the far. She hobbled into the room where I was, leaning on a cane. She
was clad in rags; but they were clean. She said: "Mr. Washin'ton, God
knows I spent de bes' days of my life in slavery. God knows I's ignorant
an'poor; but," she added, "I knows what you an' Miss Davidson is tryin' to
do. I knows you is tryin' to make better men an' better women for de
coloured race. I ain't got no money, but I wants you to dese six eggs, what
I's been savin' up, an' I wants you to put dese six eggs into de eddication of
dese boys an' gals."
Since the work at Tuskegee started, it has been my privilege to receive
many gifts for the benefit of the institution, but never any, I think that
touched me so deeply as this one.
CHAPTER IX
ANXIOUS DAYS AND SLEEPLESS NIGHTS
LITTLE later in the history of the school we had a visit from Gen-
A eral J. F. B. Marshall, the Treasurer of the Hampton Institute, who
had had faith enough to lend us the first two hundred and fifty dollars
with which to make a payment down on the farm. He remained with us a
week, and made a careful inspection of everything. He seemed well pleased
with our progress, and wrote back interesting and encouraging reports to
Hampton. A little later Miss Mary F. Mackie, the teacher who had given me
the "sweeping" examination when I entered Hampton, came to see us, and
still later General Armstrong himself came.
At the time of the visits of these Hampton friends the number of teachers
at Tuskegee had increased considerably, and the most of the new teachers
were graduates of the Hampton Institute. We gave our Hampton friends, es-
pecially General Armstrong, a cordial welcome. They were all surprised
and pleased at the rapid progress that the school had made within so short a
time. The coloured people from miles around came to the school to get a
look at General Armstrong, about whom they had heard so much. The Gen-
eral was not only welcomed by the members of my own race, but by the
Southern white people as well.
This first visit which General Armstrong made to Tuskegee gave me an
opportunity to get an insight into his character such as I had not before had.
I refer to his interest in the Southern white people. Before this I had had the
thought that General Armstrong, having fought the Southern white man,
rather cherished a feeling of bitterness toward the white South, and was in-
terested in helping only the coloured man there. But this visit convinced me
that I did not know the greatness and the generosity of the man. I soon
learned, by his visits to the Southern white people, and from his conversa-
tions with them, that he was as anxious about the prosperity and the happi-
ness of the white race as the black. He cherished no bitterness against the
South, and was happy when an opportunity offered for manifesting his sym-
pathy. In all my acquaintance with General Armstrong I never heard him
speak, in public or in private, a single bitter word against the white-man in
the South. From his example in this respect I learned the lesson that great
men cultivate love, and that only little men cherish a spirit of hatred. I
learned that assistance given to the weak makes the one who gives it strong;
and that oppression of the unfortunate makes one weak.
It is now long ago that I learned this lesson from General Armstrong, and
resolved that I would permit no man, no matter what his colour might be, to
narrow and degrade my soul by making me hate him. With God's help, I be-
lieve that I have completely rid myself of any ill feeling toward the South-
ern white man for any wrong that he may have inflicted upon my race. I am
made to feel just as happy now when I am rendering service to Southern
white men as when the service is rendered to a member of my own race. I
pity from the bottom of my heart any individual who is so unfortunate as to
get into the habit of holding race prejudice.
The more I consider the subject, the more strongly I am convinced that
the most harmful effect of the practice to which the people in certain sec-
tions of the South have felt themselves compelled to resort, in order to get
rid of the force of the Negroes' ballot, is not wholly in the wrong done to the
Negro, but in the permanent injury to the morals of the white man. The
wrong to the Negro is temporary, but to the morals of the white man the in-
jury is permanent. I have noted time and time again that when an individual
perjures himself in order to break the force of the black man's ballot, he
soon learns to practise dishonesty in other relations of life, not only where
the Negro is concerned, but equally so where a white man is concerned. The
white man who begins by cheating a Negro usually ends by cheating a
white man. The white man who begins to break the law by lynching a Ne-
gro soon yields to the temptation to lynch a white man. All this, it seems to
me, makes it important that the whole Nation lend a hand in trying to lift
the burden of ignorance from the South.
Another thing that is becoming more apparent each year in the develop-
ment of education in the South is the influence of General Armstrong's idea
of education; and this not upon the blacks alone, but upon the whites also.
At the present time there is almost no Southern state that is not putting forth
efforts in the direction of securing industrial education for its white boys
and girls, and in most cases it is easy to trace the history of these efforts
back to General Armstrong.
Soon after the opening of our humble boarding department students be-
gan coming to us in still larger numbers. For weeks we not only had to con-
tend with the difficulty of providing board, with no money, but also with
that of providing sleeping accommodations. For this purpose we rented a
number of cabins near the school. These cabins were in a dilapidated condi-
tion, and during the winter months the students who occupied them neces-
sarily suffered from the cold. We charged the students eight dollars a month
—all they were able to pay—for their board. This included, besides board,
room, fuel, and washing. We also gave the students credit on their board
bills for all the work which they did for the school which was of any value
to the institution. The cost of tuition, which was fifty dollars a year for each
student, we had to secure then, as now, wherever we could.
This small charge in cash gave us no capital with which to start a board-
ing department. The weather during the second winter of our work was very
cold. We were not able to provide enough bed-clothes to keep the students
warm. In fact, for some time we were not able to provide, except in a few
cases, bedsteads and mattresses of any kind. During the coldest nights I was
so troubled about the discomfort of the students that I could not sleep my-
self. I recall that on several occasions I went in the middle of the night to
the shanties occupied by the young men, for the purpose of comforting
them. Often I found some of them sitting huddled around a fire, with the
one blanket which we had been able to provide wrapped around them, try-
ing in this way to keep warm. During the whole night some of them did not
attempt to lie down. One morning, when the night previous had been unusu-
ally cold, I asked those of the students in the chapel who thought that they
had been frostbitten during the night to raise their hands. Three hands went
up. Notwithstanding these experiences, there was almost no complaining on
the part of the students. They knew that we were doing the best that we
could for them. They were happy in the privilege of being permitted to en-
joy any kind of opportunity that would enable them to improve their condi-
tion. They were constantly asking what they might do to lighten the burdens
of the teachers.
I have heard it stated more than once, both in the North and in the South,
that coloured people would not obey and respect each other when one mem-
ber of the race is placed in a position of authority over others. In regard to
this general belief and these statements, I can say that during the nineteen
years of my experience at Tuskegee I never, either by word or act, have
been treated with disrespect by any student or officer connected with the
institution. On the other hand, I am constantly embarrassed by the many
acts of thoughtful kindness. The students do not seem to want to see me car-
ry a large book or a satchel of any kind of a burden through the grounds. In
such cases more than one always offers to relieve me. I almost never go out
of my office when the rain is falling that some student does not come to my
side with an umbrella and ask to be allowed to hold it over me.
While writing upon this subject, it is a pleasure for me to add that in all
my contact with the white people of the South I have never received a sin-
gle personal insult. The white people in and near Tuskegee, to an especial
degree, seem to count it a privilege to show me all the respect within their
power, and often go out of their way to do this.
Not very long ago I was making a journey between Dallas (Texas) and
Houston. In some way it became known in advance that I was on the train.
At nearly every station at which the train stopped, numbers of white people,
including in most cases the officials of the town, came aboard and intro-
duced themselves and thanked me heartily for the work that I was trying to
do for the South.
On another occasion, when I was making a trip from Augusta, Georgia,
to Atlanta, being rather tired from much travel, I rode in a Pullman sleeper.
When I went into the car, I found there two ladies from Boston whom I
knew well. These good ladies were perfectly ignorant, it seems, of the cus-
toms of the South, and in the goodness of their hearts insisted that I take a
seat with them in their section. After some hesitation I consented. I had
been there but a few minutes when one of them, without my knowledge, or-
dered supper to be served to the three of us. This embarrassed me still fur-
ther. The car was full of Southern white men, most of whom had their eyes
on our party. When I found that supper had been ordered, I tried to contrive
some excuse that would permit me to leave the section, but the ladies insist-
ed that I must eat with them. I finally settled back in my seat with a sigh,
and said to myself, "I am in for it now, sure."
To add further to the embarrassment of the situation, soon after the sup-
per was placed on the table one of the ladies remembered that she had in her
satchel a special kind of tea which she wished served, and as she said she
felt quite sure the porter did not know how to brew it properly, she insisted
upon getting up and preparing and serving it herself.
At last the meal was over; and it seemed the longest one that I had ever
eaten. When we were through, I decided to get myself out of the embarrass-
ing situation and go into the smoking-room, where most of the men were by
that time, to see how the land lay. In the meantime, however, it had become
known in some way throughout the car who I was. When I went into the
smoking-room I was never more surprised in my life than when each man,
nearly every one of them a citizen of Georgia, came up and introduced him-
self to me and thanked me earnestly for the work that I was trying to do for
the whole South. This was not flattery, because each one of these individu-
als knew that he had nothing to gain by trying to flatter me.
From the first I have sought to impress the students with the idea that
Tuskegee is not my institution, or that of the officers, but that it is their in-
stitution, and that they have as much interest in it as any of the trustees or
instructors. I have further sought to have them feel that I am at the institu-
tion as their friend and adviser, and not as their overseer. It has been my aim
to have them speak with directness and frankness about anything that con-
cerns the life of the school. Two or three times a year I ask the students to
write me a letter criticising or making complaints or suggestions about any-
thing connected with the institution. When this is not done, I have them
meet me in the chapel for a heart-to-heart talk about the conduct of the
school. There are no meetings with our students that I enjoy more than
these, and none are more helpful to me in planning for the future. These
meetings, it seems to me, enable me to get at the very heart of all that con-
cerns the school. Few things help an individual more than to place responsi-
bility upon him, and to let him know that you trust him. When I have read
of labour troubles between employers and employees, I have often thought
that many strikes and similar disturbances might be avoided if the employ-
ers would cultivate the habit of getting nearer to their employees, of con-
sulting and advising with them, and letting them feel that the interests of the
two are the same. Every individual responds to confidence, and this is not
more true of any race than of the Negroes. Let them once understand that
you are unselfishly interested in them, and you can lead them to any extent.
It was my aim from the first at Tuskegee to not only have the buildings
erected by the students themselves, but to have them make their own furni-
ture as far as was possible. I now marvel at the patience of the students
while sleeping upon the floor while waiting for some kind of a bedstead to
be constructed, or at their sleeping without any kind of a mattress while
waiting for something that looked like a mattress to be made.
In the early days we had very few students who had been used to han-
dling carpenters' tools, and the bedsteads made by the students then were
very rough and very weak. Not unfrequently when I went into the students'
rooms in the morning I would find at least two bedsteads lying about on the
floor. The problem of providing mattresses was a difficult one to solve. We
finally mastered this, however, by getting some cheap cloth and sewing
pieces of this together so as to make large bags. These bags we filled with
the pine straw—or, as it is sometimes called, pine needles—which we se-
cured from the forests near by. I am glad to say that the industry of mat-
tress-making has grown steadily since then, and has been improved to such
an extent that at the present time it is an important branch of the work
which is taught systematically to a number of our girls, and that the mat-
tresses that now come out of the mattress-shop at Tuskegee are about as
good as those bought in the average store. For some time after the opening
of the boarding department we had no chairs in the students' bedrooms or in
the dining rooms. Instead of chairs we used stools which the students con-
structed by nailing together three pieces of rough board. As a rule, the furni-
ture in the students' rooms during the early days of the school consisted of a
bed, some stools, and sometimes a rough table made by the students. The
plan of having the students make the furniture is still followed, but the num-
ber of pieces in a room has been increased, and the workmanship has so im-
proved that little fault can be found with the articles now. One thing that I
have always insisted upon at Tuskegee is that everywhere there should be
absolute cleanliness. Over and over again the students were reminded in
those first years—and are reminded now—that people would excuse us for
our poverty, for our lack of comforts and conveniences, but that they would
not excuse us for dirt.
Another thing that has been insisted upon at the school is the use of the
tooth-brush. "The gospel of the tooth-brush," as General Armstrong used to
call it, is a part of our creed at Tuskegee. No student is permitted to remain
who does not keep and use a tooth-brush. Several times, in recent years,
students have come to us who brought with them almost no other article ex-
cept a tooth-brush. They had heard from the lips of older students about our
insisting upon the use of this, and so, to make a good impression, they
brought at least a tooth-brush with them. I remember that one morning, not
long ago, I went with the lady principal on her usual morning tour of in-
spection of the girls' rooms. We found one room that contained three girls
who had recently arrived at the school. When I asked them if they had
tooth-brushes, one of the girls replied, pointing to a brush: "Yes, sir. That is
our brush. We bought it together, yesterday." It did not take them long to
learn a different lesson.
It has been interesting to note the effect that the use of the tooth-brush
has had in bringing about a higher degree of civilization among the stu-
dents. With few exceptions, I have noticed that, if we can get a student to
the point where, when the first or second tooth-brush disappears, he of his
own motion buys another, I have not been disappointed in the future of that
individual. Absolute cleanliness of the body has been insisted upon from
the first. The students have been taught to bathe as regularly as to take their
meals. This lesson we began teaching before we had anything in the shape
of a bath-house. Most of the students came from plantation districts, and
often we had to teach them how to sleep at night; that is, whether between
the two sheets—after we got to the point where we could provide them two
sheets—or under both of them. Naturally I found it difficult to teach them to
sleep between two sheets when we were able to supply but one. The impor-
tance of the use of the night-gown received the same attention.
For a long time one of the most difficult tasks was to teach the students
that all the buttons were to be kept on their clothes, and that there must be
no torn places and no grease-spots. This lesson, I am pleased to be able to
say, has been so thoroughly learned and so faithfully handed down from
year to year by one set of students to another that often at the present time,
when the students march out of chapel in the evening and their dress is in-
spected, as it is every night, not one button is to be found missing.
CHAPTER XII
RAISING MONEY
We have 1100 students, 86 officers and instructors, together with their families, and
about 200 coloured people living near the school, all of whom would make use of the li-
brary building.
We have over 12,000 books, periodicals, etc., gifts from our friends, but we have no
suitable place for them, and we have no suitable reading-room.
Our graduates go to work in every section of the South, and whatever knowledge might
be obtained in the library would serve to assist in the elevation of the whole Negro race.
Such a building as we need could be erected for about $20,000. All of the work for the
building, such as brickmaking, brick-masonry, carpentry, blacksmithing, etc., would be
done by the students. The money which you would give would not only supply the build-
ing, but the erection of the building would give a large number of students an opportunity
to learn the building trades, and thes tudents would use the money paid to them to keep
themselves in school. I do not believe that a similar amount of money often could be made
go so far in uplifing a whole race.
Yours truly,
The first thing that I remember, after I had finished speaking, was that
Governor Bullock rushed across the platform and took me by the hand, and
that others did the same. I received so many and such hearty congratulations
that I found it difficult to get out of the building. I did not appreciate to any
degree, however, the impression which my address seemed to have made,
until the next morning, when I went into the business part of the city. As
soon as I was recognized, I was surprised to find myself pointed out and
surrounded by a crowd of men who wished to shake hands with me. This
was kept up on every street on to which I went, to an extent which embar-
rassed me so much that I went back to my boarding-place. The next morn-
ing I returned to Tuskegee. At the station in Atlanta, and at almost all of the
stations at which the train stopped between that city and Tuskegee, I found
a crowd of people anxious to shake hands with me.
The papers in all parts of the United States published the address in full,
and for months afterward there were complimentary editorial references to
it. Mr. Clark Howell, the editor of the Atlanta Constitution, telegraphed to a
New York paper, among other words, the following, "I do not exaggerate
when I say that Professor Booker T. Washington's address yesterday was
one of the most notable speeches, both as to character and as to the warmth
of its reception, ever delivered to a Southern audience. The address was a
revelation. The whole speech is a platform upon which blacks and whites
can stand with full justice to each other."
The Boston Transcript said editorially: "The speech of Booker T. Wash-
ington at the Atlanta Exposition, this week, seems to have dwarfed all the
other proceedings and the Exposition itself. The sensation that it has caused
in the press has never been equalled."
I very soon began receiving all kinds of propositions from lecture bu-
reaus, and editors of magazines and papers, to take the lecture platform, and
to write articles. One lecture bureau offered me fifty thousand dollars, or
two hundred dollars a night and expenses, if I would place my services at its
disposal for a given period. To all these communications I replied that my
life-work was at Tuskegee; and that whenever I spoke it must be in the in-
terests of the Tuskegee school and my race, and that I would enter into no
arrangements that seemed to place a mere commercial value upon my
services.
Some days after its delivery I sent a copy of my address to the President
of the United States, the Hon. Grover Cleveland. I received from him the
following autograph reply :—
GRAY GABLES, BUZZARD'S BAY, MASS.,
OCTOBER 6, 1895.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, ESQ. :
MY DEAR SIR: I thank you for sending me a copy of your address deliv-
ered at the Atlanta Exposition.
I thank you with much enthusiasm for making the address. I have read it
with intense interest, and I think the Exposition would be fully justified if it
did not do more than furnish the opportunity for its delivery. Your words
cannot fail to delight and encourage all who wish well for your race; and if
our coloured fellow-citizens do not from your utterances gather new hope
and form new determinations to gain every valuable advantage offered them
by their citizenship, it will be strange indeed.
Yours very truly,
GROVER CLEVELAND.
Late I met Mr. Cleveland, for the first time, when, as President, he visited
the Atlanta Exposition. At the request of myself and others he consented to
spend an hour in the Negro Building, for the purpose of inspecting the Ne-
gro exhibit and of giving the coloured people in attendance an opportunity
to shake hands with him. As soon as I met Mr. Cleveland I became im-
pressed with his simplicity, greatness, and rugged honesty. I have met him
many times since then, both as public functions and at his private residence
in Princeton, and the more I see of him the more I admire him. When he
visited the Negro Building in Atlanta he seemed to give himself up wholly,
for that hour, to the coloured people. He seemed to be as careful to shake
hands with some old coloured "auntie" clad partially in rags, and to take as
much pleasure in doing so, as if he were greeting some millionnaire. Many
of the coloured people took advantage of the occasion to get him to write
his name in a book or on a slip of paper. He was as careful and patient in
doing this as if he were putting his signature to some great state document.
Mr. Cleveland has not only shown his friendship for me in many personal
ways, but has always consented to do anything I have asked of him for our
school. This he has done, whether it was to make a personal donation or to
use his influence in securing the donations of others. Judging from my per-
sonal acquaintance with Mr. Cleveland, I do not believe that he is conscious
of possessing any colour prejudice. He is too great for that. In my contact
with people I find that, as a rule, it is only the little, narrow people who live
for themselves, who never read good books, who do not travel, who never
open up their souls in a way to permit them to come into contact with other
souls — with the great outside world. No man whose vision is bounded by
colour can come into contact with what is highest and best in the world. In
meeting men, in many places, I have found that the happiest people are
those who do the most for others; the most miserable are those do the least.
I have also found that few things, if any, are capable of making one so blind
and narrow as race prejudice. I often say to our students, in the course of
my talks to them on Sunday evenings in the chapel, that the longer I live
and the more experience I have of the world, the more I am convinced that,
after all, the one thing that is most worth living for — and dying for, if need
be — is the opportunity of making some one else more happy and more
useful.
The coloured people and the coloured newspapers at first seemed to be
greatly pleased with the character of my Atlanta address, as well as with its
reception. But after the first burst of enthusiasm began to die away, and the
coloured people began reading the speech in cold type, some of them
seemed to feel that they had been hypnotized. They seemed to feel that I
had been too liberal in my remarks toward the Southern whites, and that I
had not spoken out strongly enough for what they termed the "rights" of the
race. For a while there was a reaction, so far as a certain element of my own
race was concerned, but later these reactionary ones seemed to have been
won over to my way of believing and acting.
While speaking of changes in public sentiment, I recall that about ten
years after the school at Tuskegee was established, I had an experience that
I shall never forget. Dr. Lyman Abbott, then the pastor of Plymouth Church,
and also editor of the Outlook (then the Christian Union), asked me to write
a letter for his paper giving my opinion of the exact condition, mental and
moral, of the coloured ministers in the South, as based upon my observa-
tions. I wrote the letter, giving the exact facts as I conceived them to be.
The picture painted was a rather black one — or, since I am black, shall I
say "white"? It could not be otherwise with a race but a few years out of
slavery, a race which had not had time or opportunity to produce a compe-
tent ministry.
What I said soon reached every Negro minister in the country, I think,
and the letters of condemnation which I received from them were not few. I
think that for a year after the publication of this article every association
and every conference or religious body of any kind, of my race, that met,
did not fail before adjourning to pass a resolution condemning me, or call-
ing upon me to retract or modify what I had said. Many of these organiza-
tions went so far in their resolutions as to advise parents to cease sending
their children to Tuskegee. One association even appointed a "missionary"
whose duty it was to warn the people against sending their children to Tus-
kegee. This missionary had a son in the school, and I noticed that, whatever
the "missionary" might have said or done with regard to others, he was
careful not to take his son away from the institution. Many of the coloured
papers, especially those that were the organs of religious bodies, joined in
the general chorus of condemnation or demands for retraction.
During the whole time of the excitement, and through all the criticism, I
did not utter a word of explanation or retraction. I knew that I was right, and
that time and the sober second thought of the people would vindicate me. It
was not long before the bishops and other church leaders began to make a
careful investigation of the conditions of the ministry, and they found out
that I was right. In fact, the oldest and most influential bishop in one branch
of the Methodist Church said that my words were far too mild. Very soon
public sentiment began making itself felt, in demanding a purifying of the
ministry. While this is not yet complete by any means, I think I may say,
without egotism, and I have been told by many of our most influential min-
isters, that my words had much to do with starting a demand for the placing
of a higher type of men in the pulpit. I have had the satisfaction of having
many who once condemned me thank me heartily for my frank words.
The change of the attitude of the Negro ministry, so far as regards myself,
is so complete that at the present time I have no warmer friends among any
class than I have among the clergymen. The improvement in the character
and life of the Negro ministers is one of the most gratifying evidences of
the progress of the race. My experience with them, as well as other events
in my life, convince me that the thing to do, when one feels sure that he has
said or done the right thing, and is condemned, is to stand still and keep qui-
et. If he is right, time will show it.
In the midst of the discussion which was going on concerning my Atlanta
speech, I received the letter which I give below, from Dr. Gilman, the Presi-
dent of Johns Hopkins University, who had been made chairman of the
judges of award in connection with the Atlanta Exposition :—
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY, BALTIMORE,
Booker Washington arose. It was, of course, just the moment for him. The
multitude, shaken out of its usual symphony-concert calm, quivered with an
excitement that was not suppressed. A dozen times it had sprung to its feet
to cheer and wave and hurrah, as one person. When this man of culture and
voice and power, as well as a dark skin, began, and uttered the names of
Stearns and of Andrew, feeling began to mount. You could see tears glisten
in the eyes of soldiers and civilians. When the orator turned to the coloured
soldiers on the platform, to the colour-bearer of Fort Wagner, who smilingly
bore still the flag he had never lowered even when wounded, and said, "To
you, to the scarred and scattered remnants of the Fifty-fouther, who, with
empty sleeve and wanting leg, have honoured this occasion with your pres-
ence, to you, your commander is not dead. Though Boston erected no mon-
ument and history recorded no story, in you and in the loyal race which you
represent, Robert Gould Shaw would have a monument which time could
not wear away," then came the climax of the emotion of the day and the
hour. It was Roger Wolcott, as well as the Governor of Massachusetts, the
individual representative of the people's sympathy as well as the chief mag-
istrate, who had sprung first to his feet and cried, "Three cheers to Booker
T. Washington!"
Among those on the platform was Sergeant William H. Carney, of New
Bedford, Mass., the brave coloured officer who was the colour-bearer at
Fort Wagner and held the American flag. In spite of the fact that a large part
of his regiment was killed, he escaped, and exclaimed, after the battle was
over, "The old flag never touched the ground."
This flag Sergeant Carney held in his hands as he sat on the platform, and
when I turned to address the survivors of the coloured regiment who were
present, and referred to Sergeant Carney, he rose, as if by instinct, and
raised the flag. It has been my privilege to witness a good man satisfactory
and rather sensational demonstration in connection with some of my public
addresses, but in dramatic effect I have never seen or experience anything
which equalled this. For a number of minutes the audience seemed to en-
tirely lose control of itself.
In the general rejoicing throughout the country which followed the close
of the Spanish-American war, peace celebrations were arranged in several
of the large cities. I was asked by President William R. Harper, of the Uni-
versity of Chicago, who was chairman of the committee of invitations for
the celebration to be held in the city of Chicago, to deliver one of the ad-
dresses at the celebration there. I accepted the invitation, and delivered two
addresses there during the Jubilee week. The first of these, and the principal
one, was given in the Auditorium, on the evening of Sunday, October 16.
This was the largest audience that I have ever addressed, in any part of the
country; and besides speaking in the main Auditorium, I also addressed,
that same evening, two overflow audiences in other parts of the city.
It was said that there were sixteen thousand persons in the Auditorium,
and it seemed to me as if there were as many more on the outside trying to
get in. It was impossible for any one to get near the entrance without the aid
of a policeman. President William McKinley attended this meeting, as did
also the members of his Cabinet, many foreign ministers, and a large num-
ber of army and navy officers, many of whom had distinguished themselves
in the war which had just closed. The speakers, besides myself, on Sunday
evening, were Rabbit Emil G. Hirsch, Father Thomas P. Hodnett, and Dr.
John H. Barrows.
The Chicago Times-Herald, in describing the meeting, said of my ad-
dress:—
He pictured the Negro choosing slavery rather than extinction; recalled
Crispus Attucks shedding his blood at the beginning of the American Revo-
lution, that white Americans might be free, while black Americans re-
mained in slavery; rehearsed the conduct of the Negroes with Jackson at
New Orleans; drew a vivid and pathetic picture of the Southern slaves pro-
tecting and supporting the families of their masters while the latter were
fighting to perpetuate black slavery; recounted the bravery of coloured
troops at Port Hudson and Forts Wagner and Pillow, and praised the hero-
ism of the black regiments that stormed El Caney and Santiago to give free-
dom to the enslaved people of Cuba, forgetting, for the time being, the un-
just discrimination that law and custom make against them in their own
country.
In all of these things, the speaker declared, his race had chosen the better
part. And then he made his eloquent appeal to the consciences of the white
Americans: "When you have gotten the full story of the heroic conduct of
the Negro in the Spanish-American war, have heard it from the lips of
Norther soldier and Southern soldier, from ex-abolitionist and ex-masters,
then decide within yourselves whether a race that is thus willing to die for
its country should not be given the highest opportunity to live for its coun-
try."
The part of the speech which seemed to arouse the wildest and most sen-
sation enthusiasm was that in which I thanked the President for his recogni-
tion of the Negro in his appointments during the Spanish-American war.
The President was sitting in a box at the right of the stage. When I ad-
dressed him I turned toward the box, and as I finished the sentence thanking
him for his generosity, the whole audience rose and cheered again and
again, waving handkerchiefs and hats and canes, until the President arose in
the box and bowed his acknowledgements. At that the enthusiasm broke out
again, and the demonstration was almost indescribably.
One portion of my address at Chicago seemed to have been misunder-
stood by the Southern press, and some of the Southern papers took occasion
to criticise me rather strongly. These criticisms continued for several weeks,
until I finally received a letter from the editor of the Age-Herald, published
in Birmingham, Ala., asking me if I would say just what I meant by this
part of my address. I replied to him in a letter which seemed to satisfy my
critics. In this letter I said that I had made it a rule never to say before a
Northern audience anything that I would not say before an audience in the
South. I said that I did not think it was necessary for me to go into extended
explanations; if my seventeen years of work in the heart of the South had
not been explanation enough, I did not see how words could explain. I said
that I made the same plea that I had made in my address at Atlanta, for the
blotting out of the race prejudice in "commercial and civil relations." I said
that what is termed social recognition was a question which I never dis-
cussed, and then I quoted from my Atlanta address what I had said there in
regard to that subject.
In meeting crowds of people at public gatherings, there is one type of in-
dividual that I dread. I mean the crank. I have become so accustomed to
these people now that I can pick them out at a distance when I see them el-
bowing their way up to me. The average crank has a long beard, poorly
cared for, a lean, narrow face, and wears a black coat. The front of his vest
and coat are slick with grease, and his trousers bag at the knees.
In Chicago, after I had spoken at a meeting, I met one of these fellows.
They usually have some process for curing all of the ills of the world at
once. This Chicago specimen had a patent process by which he said Indian
corn could be kept through a period of three or four years, and he felt sure
that if the Negro race in the South would, as a whole, adopt his process, it
would settle the whole race question. It mattered nothing that I tried to con-
vince him that our present problem was to teach the Negroes how to pro-
duce enough corn to last them through one year. Another Chicago crank had
a scheme by which he wanted me to join him in an effort to close up all the
National banks in the country. If that was done, he felt sure it would put the
Negro on his feet.
The number of people who stand ready to consume one's time, to no pur-
pose, is almost countless. At one time I spoke before a large audience in
Boston in the evening. The next morning I was awakened by having a card
brought to my room, and with it a message that some one was anxious to
see me. Thinking that it must be something very important, I dressed hastily
and went down. When I reached the hotel office I found a blank and inno-
cent-looking individual waiting for me, who coolly remarked: "I heard you
talk at a meeting last night. I rather liked your talk, and so I came in this
morning to hear you talk some more."
TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA.
MY DEAR PAPA: Before you left home you told me to work at my trade
half of each day. I like my work so much that I want to work at my trade all
day. Besides, I want to earn all the money I can, so that when I go to anoth-
er school I shall have money to pay my expenses.
Your son,
BAKER.
This invitation, coming as it did from the City Council, the state officers,
and all the substantial citizens of both races of community where I had
spent my boyhood, and from which I had gone a few years before, un-
known, in poverty and ignorance, in quest of an education, not only sur-
prised me, but almost unmanned me. I could not understand what I had
done to deserve it all.
I accepted the invitation, and at the appointed day was met at the railway
station at Charleston by a committee headed by ex-Governor W. A. Mac-
Corkle, and composed of men of both races. The public reception was held
in the Opera-House at Charleston. The Governor of the state, the Hon.
George W. Atkinson, presided, and an address of welcome was made by ex-
Governor MacCorkle. A prominent part in the reception was taken by the
coloured citizens. The Opera-House was filled with citizens of both races,
and among the white people were many for whom I had worked when a
boy. The next day Governor and Mrs. Atkinson gave me a public reception
at the State House, which was attended by all classes.
Not long after this the coloured people in Atlanta, Georgia, gave me a re-
ception at which the Governor of the state presided, and a similar reception
was given me in New Orleans, which was presided over the Mayor of the
city. Invitations came from many other places which I was not able to
accept.
CHAPTER XVII
LAST WORDS
EFORE going to Europe some events came into my life which were
B great surprises to me. In fact, my whole life has largely been one of
surprises. I believe that any man's life will be filled with constant, un-
expected encouragements of this kind if he makes up his mind to do his lev-
el best each day of his life—that is, tries to make each day reach as nearly
as possible the highwater mark of pure, unselfish, useful living. I pity the
man, black or white, who has never experienced the joy and satisfaction
that come to one by reason of an effort to assist in making some one else
more useful and more happy.
Six months before he died, and nearly a year after he had been stricken
with paralysis, General Armstrong expressed a wish to visit Tuskegee again
before he passed away. Notwithstanding the fact that he had lost the use of
his limbs to such an extent that he was practically helpless, his wish was
gratified, and he was brought to Tuskegee. The owners of the Tuskegee
Railroad, white men living in the town, offered to run a special train, with-
out cost, out to the main station—Chehaw, five miles away—to meet him.
He arrived on the school grounds about nine o'clock in the evening. Some
one had suggested that we give the General a "pine-knot torchlight recep-
tion." This plan was carried out, and the moment that his carriage entered
the school grounds he began passing between two lines of lighted and wav-
ing "fat pine" wood knots held by over a thousand students and teachers.
The whole thing was so novel and surprising that the General was com-
pletely overcome with happiness. He remained a guest in my home for
nearly two months, and, although almost wholly without the use of voice or
limb, he spent nearly every hour in devising ways and means to help the
South. Time and time again he said to me, during the visit, that it was not
only the duty of the country to assist in elevating the Negro of the South,
but the poor white man as well. At the end of his visit I resolved anew to
devote myself more earnestly than ever to the cause which was so near his
heart. I said that if a man in his condition was willing to think, work, and
act, I should not be wanted in furthering in every possible way the wish of
his heart.
The death of General Armstrong, a few weeks later, gave me the privi-
lege of getting acquainted with one of the finest, most unselfish, and most
attractive men that I have ever come in contact with. I refer to the Rev. Dr.
Hollis B. Frissel, now the Principal of the Hampton Institute, and General
Armstrong's successor. Under the clear, strong, and almost perfect leader-
ship of Dr. Frissell, Hampton has had a career of prosperity and usefulness
that is all that the General could have wished for. It seems to be the constant
effort of Dr. Frissell to hide his own great personality behind that of General
Armstrong—to make himself of "no reputation" for the sake of the cause.
More than once I have been asked what was the greatest surprised that
ever came to me. I have little hesitation in answering that question. It was
the following letter, which came to me one Sunday morning when I was sit-
ting on veranda of my home at Tuskegee, surrounded by my wife and three
children :—
HARVARD UNIVERSITY, CAMBRIDGE, MAY 28, 1896
PRESIDENT BOOKER T. WASHINGTON,
MY DEAR SIR: Harvard University desires to confer on you at the ap-
proaching Commencement an honorary degree; but it is our custom to con-
fer degrees only on gentlemen who are present. Our Commencement occurs
this year on June 24, and your presence would be desirable from about noon
till about five o'clock in the afternoon. Would it be possible for you to be in
Cambridge on that day?
Believe me, with great regard,
Very truly yours,
CHARLES W. ELIOT.
This was a recognition that had never in the slightest manner entered into
my mind, and it was hard for me to realize that I was to be honoured by a
degree from the oldest and most renowned university in America. As I sat
upon my veranda, with this litter in my hand, tears came into my eyes. My
whole former life—my life as a slave on the plantation, my work in the
coal-min, the times when I was without food and clothing, when I made my
bed under a sidewalk, my struggles for an education, the trying days I had
had at Tuskegee, days when I did not know where to turn for a dollar to
continue the work there, the ostracism and sometimes oppression of my
race,—all this passed before me and nearly overcame me.
I had never sought or cared for what the world calls fame. I have always
looked upon fame as something to be used in accomplishing good. I have
often said to my friends that if I can use whatever prominence may have
come to me as an instrument with which to do good, I am content to have it.
I care for it only as a means to be used for doing good, just as wealth may
be used. The more I come into contact with wealthy people, the more I be-
lieve that they are growing in the direction of looking upon their money
simply as an instrument which God has placed in their hand for doing good
with. I never go to the office of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, who more than
once has been generous to Tuskegee, without being reminded of this. The
close, careful, and minute investigation that he always makes in order to be
sure that every dollar that he gives will do the most good—an investigation
that is just as searching as if he were investing money in a business enter-
prise—convinces me that the growth in this direction is most encouraging.
At nine o'clock, on the morning of June 24, I met President Eliot, the
Board of Overseers of Harvard University, and the other guests, at the des-
ignated place on the university grounds, for the purpose of being escorted to
Sanders Theatre, where the Commencement exercises were to be held and
degrees conferred. Among others invited to be present for the purpose of
receiving a degree at this time were General Nelson A. Miles, Dr. Bell, the
inventor of the Bell telephone, Bishop Vincent, and the Rev. Minot J. Sav-
age. We were placed in line immediately behind the President and the
Board of Overseers, and directly afterward the Governor of Massachusetts,
escorted by the Lancers, arrived and took his place in the line of march by
the side of President Eliot. In the line there were also various other officers
and professors, clad in cap and gown. In this order we marched to Sanders
Theatre, where, after the usual Commencement exercises, came the confer-
ring of the honorary degrees. This, it seems, is always considered the most
interesting feature at Harvard. It is not known, until the individuals appear,
upon whom the honorary degrees are to be conferred, and those receiving
these honours are cheered by the students and others in proportion to their
popularity. During the conferring of the degrees excitement and enthusiasm
are at the highest pitch.
When my name was called, I rose, and President Eliot, in beautiful and
strong English, conferred upon me the degree of Master of Arts. After these
exercises were over, those who had received honorary degrees were invited
to lunch with the President. After the lunch we were formed in line again,
and were escorted by the Marshal of the day, who that year happened to be
Bishop William Lawrence, through the grounds, where, at different points,
those who had been honoured were called by name and received the Har-
vard yell. This march ended at Memorial Hall, where the alumni dinner was
served. To see over a thousand strong men, representing all that is best in
State, Church, business, and education, with the glow and enthusiasm of
college loyalty and college pride,—which has, I think, a peculiar Harvard
flavour,—is a sight that does not easily fade from memory.
Among the speakers after dinner were President Eliot, Governor Roger
Wolcott, General Miles, Dr. Minot J. Savage, the Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge,
and myself. When I was called upon, I said, among other things :—
It would in some measure relieve my embarrassment if I could, even in a
slight degree, feel myself worthy of the great honour which you do me to-
day. Why you have called me from the Black Belt of the South, from
among my humble people, to share in the honours of this occasion, is not
for me to explain; and yet it may not be inappropriate for me to suggest that
it seems to me that one of the most vital questions that touch with the poor-
est, most ignorant, and humblest, and at the same time make one appreciate
the vitalizing, strengthening influence of the other. How shall we make the
mansions on yon Beacon Street feel and see the need of the spirits in the
lowliest cabin in Alabama cotton-fields or Louisiana sugar-bottoms? This
problem Harvard University is solving, not by bringing itself down, but by
bringing the masses up. If my life in the past has meant anything in the lift-
ing up of my people and the bringing about of better relations between your
race and mine, I assure you from this day it will mean doubly more. In the
economy of God there is but one standard by which an individual can suc-
ceed—there is but one for a race. This country demands that every race
shall measure itself by the American standard. By it a race must rise or fall,
succeed or fail, and in the last analysis mere sentiment counts for little. Dur-
ing the next half-century and more, my race must continue passing through
the severe American crucible. We are to be tested in our patience, our for-
bearance, our perseverance, our power to endure wrong, to withstand temp-
tations, to economize, to acquire and use skill; in our ability to compete, to
succeed in commerce, to disregard the superficial for the real, the appear-
ance for the substance, to be great and yet small, learned and yet simple,
high and yet the servant of all.
As this was the first time that a New England university had conferred an
honorary degree upon a Negro, it was the occasion of much newspaper
comment throughout the country. A correspondent of a New York paper
said :—
When the name of Booker T. Washington was called, and he arose to ac-
knowledge and accept, there was such an outburst of applause as greeted no
other name except that of the popular soldier patriot, General Miles. The
applause was not studied and stiff, sympathetic and condoling; it was enthu-
siasm and admiration. Every part of the audi- ence from pit to gallery joined
in, and a glow covered the cheeks of those around me, proving sincere ap-
preciation of the rising struggle of an ex-slave and the work he has accom-
plished for his race.
A Boston paper said, editorially :—
In conferring the honorary degree of Master of Arts upon the Principal of
Tuskegee Institute, Harvard University has honoured itself as well as the
object of this distinction. The work which Professor Booker T. Washington
has accomplished for the education, good citizenship, and popular enlight-
enment in his chosen field of labour in the South entitles him to rank with
our national benefactors. The university which can claim him on its list of
sons, whether in regular course or honoris causa, may be proud.
It has been mentioned that Mr. Washington is the first of his race to re-
ceive an honorary degree from a New England university. This, in itself, is
a distinction. But the degree was not conferred because Mr. Washington is a
coloured man, or because he was born in slavery, but because he has shown,
by his work for the elevation of the people of the Black Belt of the South, a
genius and broad humanity which count for greatness in any many, whether
his skin be white or black.
Another Boston paper said :—
It is Harvard which, first among New England college, confers an hon-
orary degree upon a black man. No one who has followed the history of
Tuskegee and its work can fail to admire the courage, persistence, and
splendid com- mon sense of Booker T. Washington. Well may Harvard hon-
our the ex-slave, the value of whose services, alike to his race and country,
only the future can estimate.
The correspondent of the New York Times wrote:—
All the speeches were enthusiastically received, but the coloured man
carried off the oratorical honours, and the applause which broke out when
he had finished was vociferous and long-continued.
Soon after I began work at Tuskegee I formed a resolution, in the secret
of my heart, that I would try to build up a school that would be of so much
service to the country that the President of the United States would one day
come to see it. This was, I confess, rather a bold resolution, and for a num-
ber of years I kept it hidden in my own thoughts, not daring to share it with
any one.
In November, 1897, I made the first move in this direction, and that was
in securing a visit from a member of President McKinley's Cabinet, the
Hon. James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture. He came to deliver an address
at the formal opening of the Slater-Armstrong Agricultural Building, our
first large building to be used for the purpose of giving training to our stu-
dents in agriculture and kindred branches.
In the fall of 1898 I heard that President McKinley was likely to visit At-
lanta, Georgia, for the purpose of taking part in the Peace Jubilee exercises
to be held there to commemorate the successful close of the Spanish-Ameri-
can war. At this time I had been hard at work, together with our teachers,
for eighteen years, trying to build up a school that we thought would be of
service to the Nation, and I determined to make a direct effort to secure a
visit from the President and his Cabinet. I went to Washington, and I was
not long in the city before I found my way to the White House. When I got
there I found the waiting rooms full of people, and my heart began to sink,
for I feared there would not be much chance of my seeing the President that
day, if at all. But, at any rate, I got an opportunity to see Mr. J. Addison
Porter, the secretary to the President, and explained to him my mission. Mr.
Porter kindly sent my card directly to the President, and in a few minutes
word came from Mr. McKinley that he would see me.
How any man can see so many people of all kind, with all kinds of er-
rands, and do so much hard work, and still keep himself calm, patient, and
fresh for each visitor in the way that President McKinley does, I cannot un-
derstand. When I saw the President he kindly thanked me for the work
which we were doing at Tuskegee for the interests of the country. I then told
him, briefly, the object of my visit. I impressed upon him the fact that a visit
from the Chief Executive of the Nation would not only encourage our stu-
dents and teachers, but would help the entire race. He seemed interested,
but did not make a promise to go to Tuskegee, for the reason that his plans
about going to Atlanta were not then fully made; but he asked me to call the
matter to his attention a few weeks later.
By the middle of the following month the President had definitely decid-
ed to attend the Peace Jubilee at Atlanta. I went to Washington again and
saw him, with a view of getting him to extend his trip to Tuskegee. On this
second visit Mr. Charles W. Hare, a prominent white citizen of Tuskegee,
kindly volunteered to accompany me, to reenforce my invitation with one
from the white people of Tuskegee and the vicinity.
Just previous to my going to Washington the second time, the country
had been excited, and the coloured people greatly depressed, because of
several severe race riots which had occurred at different point in the South.
As soon as I saw the President, I perceived that his heart was greatly de-
pressed, because of several severe race riots which had occurred at different
points in the South. As soon as I saw the President, I perceived that his
heart was greatly burdened by reason of these race disturbances. Although
there were many people waiting to see him, he detained me for some time,
discussing the condition and prospects of the race. He remarked several
times that he was determined to show his interest and faith in the race, not
merely in words, but by acts. When I told him that I thought that at that
time scarcely anything would go farther in giving hope and encouragement
to the race than the fact that the President of the Nation would be willing to
travel one hundred and forty miles out of his way to spend a day at a Negro
institution, he seemed deeply impressed.
While I was with the President, a white citizen of Atlanta, a Democrat
and an ex-slaveholder, came into the room, and the President asked his
opinion as to the wisdom of his going to Tuskegee. Without hesitation the
Atlanta man replied that it was the proper thing for him to do. This opinion
was reenforced by that friend of the race, Dr. J. L. M. Curry. The President
promised that he would visit our school on the 16th of December.
When it became known that the President was going to visit our school,
the white citizens of the town of Tuskegee—a mile distant from the school
—were as much pleased as were our students and teachers. The white peo-
ple of the town, including both men and women, began arranging to deco-
rate the town, and to form themselves into committees for the purpose of
cooperating with the officers of our school in order that the distinguished
visitor might have a fitting reception. I think I never realized before this
how much the white people of Tuskegee and vicinity thought of our institu-
tion. During the days when we were preparing for the President's reception,
dozens of these people came to me and said that, while they did not want to
push themselves into prominence, if there was anything they could do to
help, or to relieve me personally, I had but to intimate it and they would be
only too glad to assist. In fact, the thing that touched me almost as deeply as
visit of the President itself was the deep pride which all classes of citizens
in Alabama seemed to take in our work.
The morning of December 16th brought to the little city of Tuskegee
such a crowd as it had never seen before. With the President came Mrs.
McKinley and all of the Cabinet officers but one; and most of them brought
their wives or some members of their families. Several prominent generals
came, including General Shafter and General Joseph Wheeler, who were
recently returned from the Spanish-American war. There was also a host of
newspaper correspondents. The Alabama Legislature was in session at
Montgomery at this time. This body passed a resolution to adjourn for the
purpose of visiting Tuskegee. Just before the arrival of the President's party
the Legislature arrived, headed by the governor and other state officials.
The citizens of Tuskegee had decorated the town from the station to the
school in a general manner. In order to economize in the matter of time, we
arranged to have the whole school pass in review before the President. Each
student carried a stalk of sugar-can with some open bolls of cotton fastened
to the end of it. Following the students the work of all departments of the
school passed in review, displayed on "floats" drawn by horses, mules, and
oxen. On these floats we tried to exhibit not only the present work of
school, but to show the contrasts between the old methods of doing things
and the new. As an example, we showed the old method of dairying in con-
trast with the improved methods, the old methods of tilling the soil in con-
trast with the new, the old methods of cooking and housekeeping in contrast
with the new. These floats consumed an hour and a half of time in passing.
In his address in our large, new chapel, which the students had recently
completed, the President said, among other things :—
To meet you under such pleasant auspices and to have the opportunity of
a personal observation of your work is indeed most gratifying. The Tus-
kegee Normal and Industrial Institute is ideal in its conception, and has al-
ready a large and growing reputation in the country, and is not unknown
abroad. I congratulate all who are associated in this undertaking for the
good work which it is doing in the education of its students to lead lives of
honour and usefulness, thus exalting the race for which it was established.
Nowhere, I think, could a more delightful location have been chosen for
this unique educational experiment, which has attracted the attention and
won the support even of conservative philanthropists in all sections of the
country.
To speak of Tuskegee without paying special tribute to Booker T. Wash-
ington's genius and perseverance would be impossible. The inception of this
noble enterprise was his, and he deserves high credit for it. His was the en-
thusiasm and enterprise which made its steady progress possible and estab-
lished in the institution its present high standard of accomplishment. He has
won a worthy reputation as one of the great leaders of his race, widely
known and much respected at home and abroad as an accomplished educa-
tor, a great orator, and a true philanthropist.
The Hon. John D. Long, the Secretary of the Navy, said in part :—
I cannot make a speech to-day. My heart is too full—full of hope, admi-
ration, and pride for my countrymen of both sections and both colours. I am
filled with gratitude and admiration for your work, and from this time for-
ward I shall have absolute confidence in your progress and in the solution of
the problem in which you are engaged. The problem, I say, has been solved.
A picture has been presented to-day which should be put upon canvas with
the pictures of Washington and Lincoln, and transmitted to future time and
generations—a picture which the press of the country should spread broad-
cast over the land, a most dramatic picture, and that picture is this: The
President of the United States standing on this platform; on one side the
Governor of Alabama, on the other, completing the trinity, a representative
of a race only a few years ago in bondage, the coloured President of the
Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute.
God bless the President under whose majesty such a scene as that is pre-
sented to the American people. God bless the state of Alabama, which is
showing that it can deal with this problem for itself. God bless the orator,
philanthropist, and disciple of the Great Master—who, if he were on earth,
would be doing the same work—Booker T. Washington.
Postmaster General Smith closed the address which he made with these
words :—
We have witnessed many spectacles within the last few days. We have
seen the magnificent grandeur and the magnificent achievements of one of
the great metropolitan cities of the South. We have seen heroes of the war
pass by in procession. We have seen floral parades. But I am sure my col-
leagues will agree with me in saying that we have witnessed no spectacle
more impressive and more encouraging, more inspiring for our future, than
that which we have witnessed no spectacle more impressive and more en-
couraging, more inspiring for our future, than that which we have witnessed
here this morning.
Some days after the President returned the Washington I received the let-
ter which follows :—
EXECUTIVE MANSION, WASHINGTON, DEC. 23, 1899
DEAR SIR: By this mail I take pleasure in sending you engrossed copies of
the souvenir of the visit of the President to your institution. These sheets
bear the autographs of the President and the members of the Cabinet who
accompanied him on the trip. Let me take this opportunity of congratulating
you most heartily and sincerely upon the great success of the exercises pro-
vided for and entertainment furnished us under your auspices during our
visit to Tuskegee. Every feature of the programme was perfectly executed
and was viewed or participated in with the heartiest satisfaction by every
visitor present. The unique exhibition which you gave of your pupils en-
gaged in their industrial vocations was not only artistic but thoroughly im-
pressive. The tribute paid by the President and his Cabinet to your work
was none too high, and forms a most encouraging augury, I think, for the
future prosperity of your institution. I cannot close without assuring you
that the modesty shown by yourself in the exercises was most favourably
commented upon by all the members of our party.
With best wishes for the continued advance of your most useful and pa-
triotic undertaking, kind personal regards and the compliments of the sea-
son, believe me, always,
Very sincerely yours,
JOHN ADDISON PORTER,
Secretary to the President.
TO PRESIDENT BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Tuskegee Normal and Industrial
Institute, Tuskegee, Ala. Twenty years have now passed since I made the
first humble effort at Tuskegee, in a broken-down shanty and an old hen-
house, without owning a dollar's worth of property, and with but one
teacher and thirty students. At the present time the institution owns twenty-
three hundred acres of land, over sever hundred of which are under cultiva-
tion each year, entirely by student labour. There are now upon the grounds,
counting large and small, forty buildings; and all except four of these have
been almost wholly erected by the labour of our students. While the stu-
dents are at work upon the land and in erecting buildings, they are taught,
by competent instructors, the latest methods of agriculture and the trades
connected with building.
There was in constant operation at the school, in connection with thor-
ough academic and religious training, twenty-eight industrial departments.
All of these teach industries at which our men and women can find immedi-
ate employment as soon as they leave the institution. The only difficulty
now is that the demand for our graduates from both white and black people
in the South is so great that we cannot supply more than one-half the per-
sons for whom applications come to us. Neither have we the buildings not
the money for current expenses to enable us to admit to the school more
than one-half the young men and women who apply to us for admission.
In our industrial teaching we keep three things in mind: first, that the stu-
dent shall be so educated that he shall be enabled to meet conditions as they
exist now, in the part of the South where he lives—in a word, to be able to
do the thing which the world wants done; second, that every student who
graduates from the school shall have enough skill, coupled with intelligence
and moral character, to enable him to make a living for himself and others;
third, to send every graduate out feeling and knowing that labour is digni-
fied and beautiful—to make each one love labour instead of trying to escape
it. In addition to the agricultural training which we give to young men, and
the training given to our girls in all the usual domestic employments, we
now train a number of girls in agriculture each year. These girls are taught
gardening, fruit-growing, dairying, bee-culture, and poultry-raising.
While the institution is in no sense denominational, we have a depart-
ment known as the Phelps Hall Bible Training School, in which a number
of students are prepared for the ministry and other forms of Christian work,
especially work in the country districts. What is equally important, each one
of these students works half of each day at some industry, in order to get
skill and love of work, so that when he goes out from the institution he is
prepared to set the people with whom he goes to labour a proper example in
the matter of industry.
The value of our property is now over $300,000. If we add to this our en-
dowment fund, which at present at $215,000, the value of the total property
is now nearly half a million dollars. Aside from the need for more buildings
and for money for current expenses, the endowment fund should be in-
creased to at least $500,000. The annual current expenses are now about
$80,000. The greater part of this I collect each year by going from door to
door and from house to house. All of our property is free from mortgage,
and is deeded to an undenominational board of trustees who have the con-
trol of the institution.
From thirty students the number has grown to eleven hundred, coming
from twenty-seven states and territories, from Africa, Cuba, Porto Rico, Ja-
maica, and other foreign countries. In our departments there are eighty-six
officers and instructors; and if we add the families of our instructors, we
have a constant population upon our grounds of not far from fourteen hun-
dred people.
I have often been asked how we keep so large a body of people together,
and at the same time keep them out of mischief. There are two answers: that
the men and women who come to us for an education are in earnest; and
that everybody is kept busy. The following outline of our daily work will
testify to this :—
4 A.M., rising bell; 5.50 A.M., warning breakfast bell; 6 A.M., breakfast
bell; 6.20 A.M., breakfast over; 6.20 to 6.50 A.M., rooms are cleaned; 6.50,
work bell; 7.30, morning study hour; 8.20, morning school bell; 8.25, in-
spection of young men's toilet in ranks; 8.40, devotional exercises in chapel;
8.55, "five minutes with the daily news;" 9 A.M., class work begins; 12,
class work closes; 12.15 P.M., dinner; 1 P.M., work bell; 1.30 P.M., class
work begins; 3.30 P.M., class work ends; 5.30 P.M., bell to "knock off"
work; 6 P.M., supper; 7.10 P.M., evening prayers; 7.30 P.M., evening study
hours; 8.45 P.M., evening study hour closes; 9.20 P.M., warning retiring
bell; 9.30 P.M., retiring bell.
We try to keep constantly in mind the fact that the worth of the school is
to be judged by its graduates. Counting those who have finished the full
course, together with those who have taken enough training to enable them
to do reasonably good work, we can safely say that at least three thousand
men and women from Tuskegee are now at work in different parts of the
South; men and women who, by their own example or by direct effort, are
showing the masses of our race now to improve their material, educational,
and moral and religious life. What is equally important, they are exhibiting
a degree of common sense and self-control which is causing better relations
to exist between the races, and is causing the Southern white man to learn to
believe in the value of educating the men and women of my race. Aside
from this, there is the influence that is constantly being exerted through the
mothers' meeting and the plantation work conducted by Mrs. Washington.
Wherever our graduates go, the changes which soon begin to appear in
the buying of land, improving homes, saving money, in education, and in
high moral characters are remarkable. Whole communities are fast being
revolutionized through the instrumentality of these men and women.
Ten years ago I organized at Tuskegee the first Negro Conference. This is
an annual gathering which now brings to the school eight or nine hundred
representative men and women of the race, who come to spend a day in
finding out what the actual industrial, mental, and moral conditions of the
people are, and in forming plans for improvement. Out from this central
Negro Conference at Tuskegee have grown numerous state and local con-
ferences which are doing the same kind of work. As a result of the influence
of these gatherings, one delegate reported at the last annual meeting that ten
families in his community had bought and paid for homes. On the day fol-
lowing the annual Negro Conference, there is the "Workers' Conference."
This is composed of officers and teachers who are engaged in educational
work in the larger institutions in the South. The Negro Conference furnishes
a rare opportunity for these workers to study the real condition of the rank
and file of the people.
In the summer of 1900, with the assistance of such prominent coloured
men as Mr. T. Thomas Fortune, who has always upheld my hands in every
effort, I organized the National Negro Business League, which held its first
meeting in Boston, and brought together for the first time a large number of
the coloured men who are engaged in various lines of trade or business in
different parts of the United States. Thirty states were represented at our
first meeting. Out of this national meeting grew state and local business
leagues.
In addition to looking after the executive side of the work at Tuskegee,
and raising the greater part of the money for the support of the school, I
cannot seem to escape the duty of answering at least a part of the calls
which come to me unsought to address Southern white audiences and audi-
ences of my own race, as well as frequent gatherings in the North. As to
how much of my time is spent in this way, the following clipping from a
Buffalo (N.Y.) paper will tell. This has reference to an occasion when I
spoke before the National Educational Association in that city.
Booker T. Washington, the foremost educator among the coloured people of the world,
was a very busy man from the time he arrived in the city the other night from the West and
registered at the Iroquois. He had hardly removed the stains of travel when it was time to
partake of supper. Then he held a public levee in the parlours of the Iroquois until eight
o’clock. During that time he was greeted by over two hundred eminent teachers and educa-
tors from all parts of the United States. Shortly after eight o’clock he was driven in a car-
riage to Music Hall, and in one hour and a half he made two ringing addresses, to as many
as five thousand people, on Negro education. Then Mr. Washington was taken in charge by
a delegation of coloured citizens, headed by the Rev. Mr. Watkins, and hustled off to a
small informal reception, arranged in honour of the visitor by the people of his race.
Nor can I, in addition to making these addresses, escape the duty of call-
ing the attention of the South and of the country in general, through the
medium of the press, to matters that pertain to the interests of both races.
This, for example, I have done in regard to the evil habit of lynching. When
the Louisiana State Constitutional Convention was. in session, I wrote an
open letter to that body pleading for justice for the race. In all such efforts I
have received warm and hearty support from the Southern newspapers, as
well as from those in all other parts of the country.
Despite superficial and temporary signs which might lead one to entertain
a contrary opinion, there was never a time when I felt more hopeful for the
race than I do at the present. The great merit is everlasting and universal.
The outside world does not know, neither can it appreciate, the struggle that
is constantly going on in the hearts of both the Southern white people and
their former slaves to free themselves from racial prejudice; and while both
races are thus struggling they should have the sympathy, the support, and
the forbearance of the rest of the world.
As I write the closing words of this autobiography I find myself—not by
design—in the city of Richmond, Virginia: the city which only a few
decades ago was the capital of the Southern Confederacy, and where, about
twenty-five years ago, because of my poverty I slept night after night under
a sidewalk.
This time I am in Richmond as the guest of the coloured people of the
city; and came at their request to deliver an address last night to both races
in the Academy of Music, the largest and finest audience room in the city.
This was the first time that the coloured people had ever been permitted to
use this hall. The day before I came, the City Council passed a vote to at-
tend the meeting in a body to hear me speak. The state Legislature, includ-
ing the House of Delegates and the Senate, also passed a unanimous vote to
attend in a body. In the presence of hundreds of coloured people, many dis-
tinguished white citizens, the City Council, the state Legislature, and state
officials, I delivered my message, which was one of hope and cheer; and
from the bottom of my heart I thanked both races for this welcome back to
the state that gave me birth.
Index
Abbott, Dr. Lyman, 230.
Aberdeen, Lady, 285.
Abolitionists, English, 284.
Academy of Music, Richmond, address in, 319.
Adams, Lewis, 120, 121.
Africa, Negroes missionaries to, 16; Negro cannot improve condition by
emigrating to, 285; students from, at Tuskegee Institute, 313.
Age-Herald, the Birmingham, correspondence with editor of, 256.
Agricultural Building at Tuskegee, the Slater-Armstrong, 302.
Agriculture in Holland, 278.
Alabama Hall, 177-178.
“Aliens,” effect of, on Southerners, 234-235.
Amanda, Washington’s sister, 5, 71.
Ancestors, of Washington, 2; disadvantage of having, 35, 39-40; advan-
tage of having, 36-37.
Andrew, Governor, 251.
Anecdotes, object of repeating, in public speaking, 243.
Anthony, Susan B., 285.
Antwerp, Belgium, Washington in, 277.
Armstrong, General Samuel C., 54-57, 94, 97, 106; benefit to Washington
of contact with, 73; helps Tuskegee Institute financially, 146; visits Tus-
kegee, 55, 163, 293-294; death of, 295.
Atkinson, Governor G. W., 290, 291.
Atlanta, Ga., Washington addresses Christian Workers at, 204-205; ad-
dress at opening of International Exposition at, 206, 210-225.
Atlanta Exposition, the, 206; Hampton and Tuskegee represented at, 209;
Washington’s address, 210-225; President Cleveland at, 227—228; Wash-
ington appointed judge of, 233.
Attucks, Crispus, 254.
Audience, the best, 245; Washington’s largest, 253-254; the English, 287.
Auditorium, Chicago, Jubilee addresses in the, 253-255.
Authority, respect for, among Negroes, 168-169.
Baldwin, William H., 216.
Ballot, justice to Negro concerning his, 235-237. See Franchise.
“Banking and discount” favourite study among Negroes, 122.
Barrows, Dr. John H., 254.
Baths, at Hampton, 58; Negroes in Malden taught use of, 75; at Tus-
kegee, 175.
Battle at Malden between Negroes and whites, 78.
Bed-clothes, lack of, at Tuskegee, 167-168.
Bedford, Rev. Robert C., 157-158, 161.
Begging, science of, 180-181; Washington avoids, 182.
Belgium, trip through, 278.
Bell, Alexander Graham, 297.
Benefits of slavery, 16-17.
Bible, use and value of the, 67.
Bible Training School at Tuskegee, 260, 312.
Bicknell, Hon. Thomas W., 199.
“Big house,” the, 9.
Biography, Washington’s fondness for, 263.
Birmingham, England, Washington visits, 284.
Black Belt of the South, 299, 301; defined, 108.
Blind, Royal College for the. Commencement exercises of the, 2S5.
“Blue-back” spelling-book, the, 27, 31.
Boarding department begun at Tuskegee, 159-161; growth of, 177.
Boggs, E. L., 290.
Book, Washington’s first, 27.
Boston, money-raising experiences in, 184-185; dedication of Shaw
Memorial in, 249-253; meeting in Hollis Street Theatre in, 270; first meet-
ing of National Negro Business League in, 316.
Boyhood days, Washington’s, 23-42.
Brickmaking at Tuskegee, 150-153.
Bright, John, 284.
Bristol, England, Washington speaks in, 284-285.
Bruce, Senator B. K., 86, 89.
Bruce, Mrs. B. K., 259.
Brussels, Washington visits, 278.
Bryce, James, 283.
Buffalo, N.Y., address before National Educational Association in, 317.
Bullock, Governor, of Georgia, 86, 217, 241.
Business League, National Negro, 316.
Business men make best audiences, 245.
“Call to preach,” prevalence of, among coloured people, 82; one old Ne-
gro’s, 128.
Campbell, George W., 120, 146.
Canal-boat trip through Holland, 278.
Cards, Washington not fond of, 266.
Carnegie, Andrew, 190-192.
Carney, Sergeant William H., 252, 253.
Carpetbaggers, 86.
“Cat-hole,” the, 3.
“Cavalier among Roundheads, a,” 240.
Chapel, donation for, at Tuskegee, 190; President McKinley speaks in,
307-308.
Charleston, W. Va., capital moved to, 92; reception to Washington in,
289-291.
Chattanooga, address at, 248.
Cheating white man, the, 166, 237.
Chicago, University of, addresses at, 253-255.
Choate, Hon. Joseph H., 283, 284.
Christian Endeavour societies, help of, in Tuskegee work, 193; addresses
before, 247.
Christian Endeavour Society at Tuskegee, 198.
Christian Union, letter from Washington in the, 230.
Christian Workers, Washington addresses meeting of, at Atlanta, 204-
205.
Christmas, first, at Tuskegee, 133.
Churches burned by Ku Klux Klan, 78.
Civil War, the, 8, 10.
Clark, Mr. and Mrs., of Street, England, 2S4.
Cleanliness the first law at Tuskegee, 174-175.
Clemens, Samuel L., 284.
Cleveland, Grover, letter to Washington from, 227; at the Atlanta Exposi-
tion, 227-228; Washington’s opinion of, 228.
Clock, young Washington and the, 32.
Clocks in Negro cabins, 113.
Clothing, barrels of, from the North, 60.
Coal-mining in West Virginia, 38-39.
Cobden, Richard, Washington a guest of the daughter of, 284.
College men third best audiences to address, 247.
Colour prejudice, 228-229, 289; at hotels, 47, 157.
Coloured Women’s Clubs, National Federation of, 268.
Commencement, at Hampton, 94; of Royal College for the Blind, Lon-
don, 285; at Harvard, 295-302.
“Commercial and civil relations,” Washington pleads for blotting out of
race prejudice in, 256.
Conference, first Negro, 315; Workers’, at Tuskegee, 316.
Connecticut, Washington first visits, 74.
Corn, parched, used for coffee, 10.
Corner-stone of first building at Tuskegee laid, 143-144.
Cotton formerly chief product at Tuskegee, 113.
Cotton States Exposition. See Atlanta Exposition.
Couch, George S., 290.
Courtesy of white Southerners toward Washington, 169-171.
Courtney, Dr. Samuel E., 96.
Cranks, experiences with, 256-258, 264.
“Credit is capital,” 146.
Creelman, James, 238.
Criticism of South, place for, is the South, 201.
Crystal Palace, London, Washington speaks in the, 285.
Cuba, students from, at Tuskegee, 313.
Curry, Hon. J. L. M., 194-195, 247, 305.
Davidson, Miss Olivia A., 124-126, 131, 140, 141, 212; marriage to
Washington, 198; death, 198-199.
Dawson, William M. O., 290.
Debating societies at Hampton, 68.
Debating society at Malden, 76.
Degree, Washington’s Harvard, 250, 295-302.
Devotional exercises at Tuskegee, 270.
Dickinson, John Q., 290.
Dining room, first, at Tuskegee, 159-161; present, 162.
Donald, Rev. E. Winchester, 189-190.
Donations, first, to Tuskegee Institute, 131-132, 138; for new building at
Tuskegee, 140; from the North, 141-143; many that are never made public,
182-183; from gentleman near Stamford, 186-187; any philanthropic work
must depend mainly on small, 192-193.
Douglass, Frederick, 99-100, 284, 288.
Drunkenness at Christmas time, 133-134.
Du Bois, Dr. W. E. B., 270.
Dumb animals, Negroes’ kindness to, 282.
Dunbar, Paul Lawrence, 270.
Education, Washington’s theory of, for Negro, 203.
Educational Department of Atlanta Exposition, Washington a judge of,
233.
Educational test suggested for franchise, 84, 237.
El Caney, black regiments at, 255.
Eliot, President Charles W., 296, 297, 298, 299.
Emancipation Proclamation, 5, 15, 21.
England, Washington in, 282-288.
“Entitles,” Negroes’, 24, 123.
Essex Hall, London, Washington’s address in, 283.
Europe, Mr. and Mrs. Washington’s visit to, 262, 271-288.
Examination, a “sweeping,” 52, 163, 281.
Executive council at Tuskegee, 259.
Fame a weapon for doing good, 296.
Federation of Southern Coloured Women’s Clubs, 268.
Fiction, Washington’s opinion of, 263.
Fisk University, Miss Margaret J. Murray a graduate of, 267.
Five-minute speech, an important, at Atlanta, 204-205.
Flax, clothes made from, 11.
Forbes, John M., 251.
“Foreday” visits, 133.
“Foreigners,” feeling in South toward, 234-235.
Fort Pillow, coloured soldiers at, 255.
Fortress Monroe, Washington works in restaurant at, 64-65.
Fortune, T. Thomas, 316.
Fort Wagner, coloured soldiers at, 251, 252, 255.
Foster, Hon. M. F., 194.
Framingham, Mass., Miss Davidson student at Normal School at, 125;
Portia Washington at, 274.
Franchise, property or educational test suggested for, 84; same law for
both Negroes and whites recommended, 86-87; injury to whites of depriv-
ing Negro of, 165-166; belief that justice will be done Negro in matter of,
234-235.
Franklin County, Va., Washington born in, 1.
Freedom, granted to Negroes, 19-22; interest in, in England, 284.
Friendship, an Englishman’s, 287-288.
Friesland, voyage on the, 275.
Frissell, Dr. Hollis B., 106, 295.
“Frolic,” the Christmas, 135.
Fuller, Chief Justice, 279.
Future of Negro, 202.
Gaines, Bishop, 207.
Games, Washington’s lack of interest in, 266.
Garrison, Francis J., 271, 274, 283.
Garrison, William Lloyd, 7, 284.
Gilman, Dr. D. C., 232-233.
Ginger-cakes, incident of the, 10.
Gladstone, Washington compared to, 240.
Graduates of Tuskegee send annual contributions, 193.
Grady, Henry, 238, 240.
Grant, Bishop, 207.
“Grape-vine” telegraph, 8, 19.
Great men, education of contact with, 55.
Greek and Latin learning, craze among Negroes for, 80, 81.
Guitar lesson, story of the, 94.
Hale’s Ford, Washington’s birthplace, 1.
Hampton Institute, Washington first hears of, 42; resolves to attend, 43;
journey to, 46-50; a student at, 53-74; John and James Washington attend,
76-77; character-building result of training at, 87-S8 ; Washington revisits,
94-95 ; Washington returns as a teacher, 97; represented at Atlanta Exposi-
tion, 209; under Dr. Frissell, 295.
Hare, Charles W., 304.
Harlan, Justice, 279.
Harper, President William R., 253.
Harrison, Benjamin, 279.
Harvard, Washington’s honorary degree from, 250, 295-302.
Hat, Washington’s first, 33.
Hemenway, Mrs. Mary, 125.
Herford, Dr. Brooke, 283.
Higginson, Henry L., 272.
Hirsch, Rabbi Emil G., 254.
Hodnett, Father Thomas P., 254.
Holland, Washington’s trip through, 277-278.
Hollis Street Theatre, Boston, meeting in, 270.
Holstein cattle in Holland, 278.
“Honour roll” at Hampton, 73.
Hotel, Washington refused admittance to, 47; no trouble at, in Northamp-
ton, Mass., 157.
“House father,” Washington as, to Indians at Hampton, 97-98.
House of Commons, visit to the, 285.
Howell, Albert, Jr., 217.
Howell, Clark, 225-226, 239.
Huntington, Collis P., 188-189.
Indians at Hampton, 97-99.
Industrial departments at Tuskegee Institute, 311.
Industrial education, value of, 126-127, 154-156; growth of belief in
worth of, 166; importance of, impressed on Negroes in addresses, 206; ad-
vantages of, dwelt on in Atlanta Exposition address, 218-220; at present
time at Tuskegee, 312. See Labour.
International Congress of Women in London, 285.
International Exposition. See Atlanta Exposition.
Intoxication, prevalence of, at Christmas time, 133-134.
Ireland, Archbishop, 279.
Iroquois Hotel, Buffalo, public levee in, 317.
Jackson, Andrew, 254.
Jamaica, students from, at Tuskegee, 313.
Janitor, Washington installed as, at Hampton, 53.
Jesup, Morris K., 194-195, 247.
John E. Slater Fund, the, 194, 195, 247.
Jubilee exercises in Atlanta, 303, 304.
Jubilee week in Chicago, 253-256.
Kilns, difficulty in making, 151-152.
Ku Klux Klan, the, 77-79.
Labour, in ante-bellum days badge of degradation in South, 17; dignity
of, 72-74, 148; coloured minister claims that God has cursed all, 135; new
students at Tuskegee object to manual, 155-156; means of avoiding troubles
suggested, 172. See Industrial Education.
La Follette, L. M., 290.
Laidley, George S., 291.
Lawrence, Bishop William, 270, 298,
Lee, Colonel Henry, 251.
Letter, from Miss Mary F. Mackie, 72; from Alabama men to General
Armstrong, 106-107; to Andrew Carnegie, 191-192; from President Cleve-
land, 227; from Dr. D. C. Gilman, 233; from Baker T. Washington, 269;
from citizens of Charleston, W. Va., 289, 290; from President Eliot, 295-
296; from John Addison Porter, 310.
Library, Washington’s first, 45; first, at Tuskegee, 190; funds for new,
supplied by Andrew Carnegie, 191-192; on the St. Louis, 288.
Lieutenant-governor, a coloured, 85.
Lincoln, Abraham, Washington’s mother prays for, 7; mentioned, 8, 309;
Washington’s patron saint in literature, 263.
Live stock, fine breeds at Hampton, 66; first, at Tuskegee, 139; Washing-
ton’s individual, 265; in Holland, 278.
Lodge, Henry Cabot, 299.
Logan, Warren, 158-159, 259.
London, Washington visits, 282-288.
Long, John D., 308-309.
Lord, Miss Nathalie, 67.
Louisiana State Constitutional Convention, letter on lynching to the, 318.
Lovejoy, Elijah P., 7.
Lumber supplied on strength of Washington’s word, 140.
Luxembourg Palace, American Negro’s painting in, 280.
Lynching, Washington writes open letter on, 318.
MacCorkle, ex-Governor W. A., 290, 291.
Mackie, Miss Mary E., 53, 54, 72, 163.
McKinley, President, 181; at the Auditorium meeting, Chicago, 254;
Washington’s interviews with, 303-305; visits Tuskegee, 306-310.
Macon County, Ala., Tuskegee county-seat of, 121.
McWhorter, L. E., 291.
Madison, Wis., Washington begins public-speaking career at, 199, 242.
Mail-carrier as disseminator of news among slaves, 9.
Malden, W. Va., Washington’s relatives move to, 24-25; Washington re-
visits, 68; teaches school at, 75; Ku Klux Klan at, 77-78.
Mark Twain, 284.
“Mars’ Billy,” death of, 12-13.
Marshall, Edward, 275, 278.
Marshall, General J. B. F., 66, 129, 163.
Master of Arts, Washington made a, 298.
“Masters” in England, 286.
Mattress-making at Tuskegee, 1 73.
Meals, in slave quarters, 9; among Negroes in early days at Tuskegee,
112-115; trials in connection with, in boarding department, 160-161; sched-
ule of, at present, at Tuskegee, 314.
Memorial Hall, Harvard, Washington’s speech in, 299-301.
Memphis, yellow-fever epidemic at, 124.
Middle passage, the, 2.
Miles, General Nelson A., 297, 299, 300.
Ministers, over-supply among Negroes, 82-83; improvement in character
of Negro, 232.
Missionaries, Negroes as, 16.
Missionary organization, officer of a, discourages Washington’s efforts,
156-157.
“Mister,” calling a Negro, 247.
“Mistresses” in England, 286.
Molasses, black, substitute for sugar, 10; from the “ big house,” 245-246.
Montgomery, Ala., Rev. Robert C. Bedford pastor in, 157.
Morgan, S. Griffitts, 59.
Morocco, anecdote of the citizen of, 103.
Moses, Washington termed a Negro, 238.
Mothers’ meeting in Tuskegee, 267, 315.
Murray, Miss Margaret J., 267-268.
Music Hall, Boston, address in, 250-253.
Music Hall, Buffalo, addresses in, 317.
Name, Washington chooses his own, 34.
Names, emancipated Negroes change, 23-24; of Tuskegee students, 123.
National Educational Association, speech at meeting of, in Madison,
Wis., 199, 242; address before, in Buffalo, 317.
National Federation of Coloured Women’s Clubs, 268.
National Negro Business League, 316.
Negro Building at Atlanta Exposition, 208-209; President Cleveland vis-
its, 227-228.
Negro Conference, first, 315.
Nelson, Bishop, of Georgia, 217.
New Orleans, reception to Washington in, 292.
Newspapers, quoted, 226, 238-241, 250-256, 300-302, 317; Washing-
ton’s delight in, 263.
New York, a rebuff in, 156-157; Mr. and Mrs. Washington sail from, 275.
Night-gown, lessons in use of, 176.
Night-school, started in Malden, 30; Washington attends, in Malden, 37;
Washington opens, in Malden, 75; established at Plampton, 104-105; at
Tuskegee, 196-197.
Nobility, respect for the, in England, 287.
North, the. Miss Davidson solicits funds in, 141; Washington and Miss
Davidson again visit, 156-157; General Armstrong takes Washington to,
with quartette, 178-180; later addresses in, 206. See Boston.
Northampton, Mass., Washington at, 157.
Novels, Washington forces himself to read, 263.
Odell, Hon. Benjamin B., Jr., 289.
Opera House, Charleston, W. Va., reception to Washington in the, 291.
Organ, Negro family own a sixty-dollar, 113.
Page, Thomas Nelson, 233.
Painting, American Negro’s, in Luxembourg Palace, 280.
Paris, Washington’s visit to, 278-282.
Parliament, Washington visits, 285.
“Patrollers,” the, 77-78.
Payne, Charles K., 291.
Peabody Fund, the, 194, 195.
Peace Conference, the, 278.
Penn, I. Garland, 209.
Phelps Hall Bible Training School, 260, 312.
Philanthropy, English, 287.
Pig, Washington’s favourite animal, 265.
Pinchback, Governor, 86.
“Pine-knot torchlight reception,” a, 294.
Plantation work, Mrs. Washington’s course in, 267, 315.
“Plucky Class,” the, 105.
Political life, allurements of, 85.
Politics in early days at Tuskegee, 110-111.
Poor whites, 26.
Porter, A. H., 142.
Porter, General Horace, 279, 280.
Porter Hall, 142; first service in chapel of, 157.
Porter, John Addison, 303, 310.
Port Hudson, Negro soldiers at, 255.
Porto Rico, students from, at Tuskegee, 313.
Post-graduate address at Plampton, 94.
Potato-hole, the, 4.
Prichard, Mr. L., 290.
Property test suggested for franchise, 84, 237.
Providence, R.I., a lucky morning in, 189.
Public speaking, emptiness of mere abstract, 67; Washington’s first prac-
tice in, 92; in conjunction with General Armstrong in the North, 180; “An
idea for every word,” 180; career begins at Madison, Wis., 199; secret of
success in, 238-256.
Quartette, Washington and the Hampton, in the North, 178-180.
Queen, the, Washington takes tea with, 285.
Quincy, Hon. Josiah, 251.
Race feeling in America, 289.
Race riots in the South, 304.
Reading, Washington’s tastes in, 263.
Reading-room, established at Malden, 76; first, at Tuskegee, 190.
Reconstruction period, 80-91.
Reid, Ed., 291.
Reliability of slaves, 13, 14, 15, 19.
Richmond, Va., Washington’s first experiences in, 48-50; meets Dr. Curry
in, 194-195; guest of the coloured people of, 318-319.
Rich people, necessity for, in the world, 182; business methods essential
in dealing with, 192.
Rockefeller, John D., 297.
Rotterdam, Washington visits, 278.
Royal College for the Blind, Commencement exercises of the, 285.
Ruffner, General Lewis, 43, 78.
Ruffner, Mrs. Viola, 43-45, 71.
St. Gaudens, Augustus, 251.
St. Louis, gift of a library by citizens of, 288.
St. Louis, voyage in the, 288.
Salt-mining in West Virginia, 25-26.
Sanders Theatre, Commencement exercises in, 297-298.
Santiago, black regiments at, 255.
Savage, Rev. Minot J., 297, 299.
School, Washington as a boy escorts white children to, 6-7; first, for Ne-
groes, 29; night, started, 30; Washington first attends, 31; at Hampton, see
Hampton; Washington teaches, at Malden, 75; opened at Tuskegee, 106-
I10, 119. See Night-school.
Schoolhouses burned, 78.
Scott, Emmett J., 259, 274.
Servants in England, 286.
Sewell, Senator, 275, 277.
Sewing-machines at Tuskegee, 1 13.
Shafter, General, 306.
Shaw Memorial, address at dedication of, 249-253.
Shaw, Robert Gould, 249-250.
Sheets, Washington’s first experience with, 60-61; lessons in use of, at
Tuskegee Institute, 175-176.
Shirt, flax, 11, 12.
Shoes, Washington’s first pair of, 11.
Sidewalk, Washington sleeps under a, in Richmond, 49.
Slater-Armstrong Agricultural Building, 302.
Slavery, benefits of, 16-17.
Slaves, quarters of, 2-5; attitude of, during Civil War, 12-14; freed, 19-
22.
Slave ship, 2.
Smith, Miss Fannie N., 146-147.
Smith, Postmaster-General, 309.
Smith, W. Herman, 289.
Snuff-dipping, 115.
“Social recognition” never discussed by Washington, 256.
“Soul” necessary to success in public speaking, 244.
Spanish-American War, Negroes in, 255.
Stafford House, London, a reception at, 287-2S8.
Stage-coach travel, 46, 47.
Stamford, Conn., generous donor from, 186-187.
Stanley, Sir Henry M., 285.
Stanton, Mrs. Elizabeth Cady, 279.
Stanton, Theodore, 278.
Story, effect of telling, in public speaking, 243; the humorous, in Eng-
land, 287.
Strike of coal-miners, 68-69.
Strikes, means of avoiding, 1 72.
Sturge, Joseph, 284.
Suffrage. See Franchise.
Sutherland, Duke and Duchess of, 287-288.
“Sweeping” examination, a, 52, 163, 281.
Taliaferro, Washington’s name originally, 35.
Tanner, Henry O., 280-281.
“Teacher’s day,” 29.
Ten-dollar bill, incident of finding a, 65.
Tents used as dormitories, 57.
Texas, travelling in, 169.
Thanksgiving service, first, at Tuskegee, 157-158.
“The Force That Wins,” 94.
The Plague, visit to, 278.
Thompson, Mrs. Joseph, 21 7^ 239.
Thompson, Hon. Waddy, 144.
“Three cheers to Booker T. Washington!” in Boston, 252.
Times, New York, quoted, 302.
Times-Herald, Chicago, quoted, 254-255.
Tooth-brush, gospel of the, 75, 174-175.
Transcript, Boston, quoted, 226, 250-252.
Trotter, J. R., 290.
Trust, slaves true to a, 13, 14, 15, 19.
Tuition, cost of, at Hampton, 59; in night-school at Hampton, 104; at
Tuskegee, 167; in night-school at Tuskegee, 196-197.
Tuskegee, Washington first goes to, 107; acquisition of present site of
school, 128-130; General Armstrong at, 55, 163, 293-294; represented at
the Atlanta Exposition, 209; executive force of the Institute, 258-259; Presi-
dent McKinley and Cabinet at, 306-310.
Umbrella, Dr. Donald and the, 190.
University Club of Paris, Washington a guest at the, 279.
University of Chicago addresses, Washington’s, 253-255.
Unwin, Mr. and Mrs. T. Fisher, 284.
Vacation, at Hampton, 63, 68; the first in nineteen years, 262, 273. See
Europe.
Vessel, Washington helps unload, in Richmond, 49.
Victoria, Queen, 285.
Vincent, Bishop John H., 297.
Virtue of Negro women, 249.
Wagon-making at Tuskegee, 154.
Washington, D.C., author a student in, 87-91; visits, in interests of At-
lanta Exposition, 207-208; talks with President McKinley in, 303-305.
Washington, Baker Taliaferro, 199, 264, 268-269.
Washington, Booker T., father of, 2-3; mother of, 2-4, 21, 27, 28, 31, 33,
45, 70; sister of, 5, 71; stepfather of, 24, 26, 30.
Washington, Mrs. Booker T. See Smith, Miss Fannie N., Davidson, Miss
Olivia A., and Murray, Miss Margaret J.
Washington, Ernest Davidson, 199, 264, 269.
Washington, George, 101-102, 309.
Washington, James B., 37, 77.
Washington, John, 5, 12, 59, 68, 70, 71, 76.
Washington, Portia M., 147, 264, 268.
Watch, Washington pawns his, 152.
Waterloo, a visit to battletield of, 278.
Watkins, Rev. Mr., of Buffalo, 317.
Westminster, Duke of, 285.
West Virginia, Washington canvasses in interests of Charleston for capi-
tal, 93.
Wheeler, General Joseph, 306.
Wheeling, W. Va., capital moved from, 93.
Whittier, James G., 284.
Wilson, ex-Governor E. W., 290.
Wilson, Hon. James, 302.
Windsor Castle, visit to, 285.
Wolcott, Roger, 250-252, 298, 299.
Woman’s club at Tuskegee Institute, 268.
Women, virtue of Negro, 249; International Congress of, 285.
Women’s Liberal Club of Bristol, England, 285.
Work, outline of daily, at Tuskegee, 314.
Workers’ Conference, 316.
World, New York, quoted, 238-241.
Worrying, necessity of avoiding, 181.
Young Men’s Christian Association at Tuskegee, 198.
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1. Title page
2. Up From Slavery
3. Preface
4. A Slave among Slaves
5. Boyhood Days
6. The Struggle for an Education
7. Helping Others
8. The Reconstruction Period
9. Black Race and Red Race
10. Early Days at Tuskegee
11. Teaching School in a Stable and a Hen-House
12. Anxious Days and Sleepless Nights
13. A Harder Task than making Bricks without Straw
14. Making their Beds before they could lie on them
15. Raising Money
16. Two Thousand Miles for a Five Minute Speech
17. The Atlanta Exposition Address
18. The Secret of Success in Public Speaking
19. Europe
20. Last Words
21. Index
22. About