|

|
Washington, Booker T(aliaferro) (1856-1915)
American educator, who urged blacks to
attempt to uplift themselves through educational attainments and economic
advancement.
Washington
was born April 5, 1856, on a plantation in Franklin County, Virginia, the
son of a slave. Following the American Civil War, his family moved to
Malden, West Virginia, where he worked in a salt furnace and in coal
mines, attending school whenever he could. From 1872 to 1875 he attended a
newly founded school for blacks, Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute
(now Hampton University). After graduation he taught for two years in
Malden and then studied at Wayland Seminary, in Washington, D.C. In 1879
he became an instructor at Hampton Institute, where he helped to organize
a night school and was in charge of the industrial training of 75 Native
Americans. The school was so successful that in 1881 the founder of
Hampton Institute, the American educator Samuel Chapman Armstrong,
appointed Washington organizer and principal of a black normal school in
Tuskegee, Alabama
(now Tuskegee University). Washington made the institution into a major
center for industrial and agricultural training and in the process became
a well-known public speaker.
On
September 18, 1895, in Atlanta, Georgia, Washington made his famous
compromise speech. In this address he urged blacks to accept their
inferior social position for the present and to strive to raise themselves
through vocational training and economic self-reliance. Many whites,
pleased by his views, and many blacks, awed by his prestige, accepted
Washington as the chief spokesperson of the American black. More militant
blacks, such as the American writer and sociologist W.
E. B. DuBois, objected to such quiescent tactics, however, and
strongly opposed Washington.
Washington
founded several organizations, including the National Negro Business
League, to further black advancement. He died on November 14, 1915, at
Tuskegee. Among his books are The Future of the American Negro (1899), the
autobiography Up from Slavery (1901), Life of Frederick Douglass (1907),
The Story of the Negro (1909), and My Larger Education (1911). The site of
the plantation where Washington was born is now a national monument.

"Washington, Booker T(aliaferro)," Microsoft® Encarta® Online
Encyclopedia 2001
http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights
reserved.


|
|
|