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Alonzo Herndon, Booker T. Washington, and W.E.B. Du Bois: Similarities between These Men

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Alonzo Herndon, Booker T. Washington, and W.E.B. Du Bois: Similarities between These Men
Alonzo Herndon was born into slavery because he was son of his master Frank Herndon and mother Sophenie. At age seven he was emancipated and began to work with his family members in social circle Georgia as a sharecropper. 13 years later he left and started a barber shop in Clayton County. After his business thrived he decided to invest in real estate, and then entered the insurance world. While pursuing a job in insurance he made Atlanta Life Insurance Company which had branches in Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, and Texas. After all of his success Herndon became the first black millionaire. Today his home is a national landmark. Was one of the founding members of the Negro business League, He also contributed to the Niagara movement. Helped fund Atlanta University. John hope was an important African American educator and race leader of the early 1900’s. In 1906 he became the first black president of Morehouse college (which was the same that Martin Luther King Jr. was born.) he also 23 years later became first African American president of Atlanta University. Was part of the Niagara movement, The NAACP, YMCA, and Colored Men’s Department. He also went to Brown University in providence, Rhode Island. Hope taught at a small liberal arts school in the outskirts of Nashville, Tennessee. Hope married Lugenia burns in 1897.Moved to Atlanta and taught at Atlanta Baptist College which later became Morehouse. Died of pneumonia in 1936 at the age of sixty-seven. These two men have many similarities because of the fact that they are both civil rights leaders and activists they have more even closer relationships. Both of these men were leaders and founders of the NAACP. Being involved in the Niagara movement also was a common factor these to share. They were married and were born into a mixed raced family. Booker T. Washington was born in April 5, 1856 he became an African American author, orator, and advisor to presidents of the United States. Has a

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