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Booker T Washington Biography
Hall
of Fame Conservative
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Booker T. Washington
recalled his childhood in his autobiography, Up From Slavery. He was born
in 1856 on the Burroughs tobacco farm which, despite its small size, he
always referred to as a "plantation." His mother was a cook, his father
a white man from a nearby farm. "The early years of my life, which were
spent in the little cabin," he wrote, "were not very different from those
of other slaves."
He went to school
in Franklin County - not as a student, but to carry books for one of James
Burroughs's daughters. It was illegal to educate slaves. "I had the feeling
that to get into a schoolhouse and study would be about the same as getting
into paradise," he wrote. In April 1865 the Emancipation Proclamation
was read to joyful slaves in front of the Burroughs home. Booker's family
soon left to join his stepfather in Malden, West Virginia. The young boy
took a job in a salt mine that began at 4 a.m. so he could attend school
later in the day. Within a few years, Booker was taken in as a houseboy
by a wealthy towns-woman who further encouraged his longing to learn.
At age 16, he walked much of the 500 miles back to Virginia to enroll
in a new school for black students. He knew that even poor students could
get an education at Hampton Institute, paying their way by working. The
head teacher was suspicious of his country ways and ragged clothes. She
admitted him only after he had cleaned a room to her satisfaction.
In one respect
he had come full circle, back to earning his living by menial tasks. Yet
his entrance to Hampton led him away from a life of forced labor for good.
He became an instructor there. Later, as principal and guiding force behind
Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, which he founded in 1881, he became recognized
as the nation's foremost black educator.
Washington the
public figure often invoked his own past to illustrate his belief in the
dignity of work. "There was no period of my life that was devoted to play,"
Washington once wrote. "From the time that I can remember anything, almost
everyday of my life has been occupied in some kind of labor." This concept
of self-reliance born of hard work was the cornerstone of Washington's
social philosophy.
As one of the
most influential black men of his time, Washington was not without his
critics. Many charged that his conservative approach undermined the quest
for racial equality. "In all things purely social we can be as separate
as the fingers," he proposed to a biracial audience in his 1895 Atlanta
Compromise address, "yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual
progress." In part, his methods arose for his need for support from powerful
whites, some of them former slave owners. It is now known, however, that
Washington secretly funded antisegregationist activities. He never wavered
in his belief in freedom: "From some things that I have said one may get
the idea that some of the slaves did not want freedom. This is not true.
I have never seen one who did not want to be free, or one who would return
to slavery."
By the last
years of his life, Washington had moved away from many of his accommodationist
policies. Speaking out with a new frankness, Washington attacked racism.
In 1915 he joined ranks with former critics to protest the stereotypical
portrayal of blacks in a new movie, "Birth of a Nation." Some months later
he died at age 59. A man who overcame near-impossible odds himself, Booker
T. Washington is best remembered for helping black Americans rise up from
the economic slavery that held them down long after they were legally
free citizens.
http://www.nps.gov/archive/bowa/btwbio.html
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