Washington were both very intelligent men who made history for African-Americans. Words can't begin to explain just how thankful we should be for the two of them as they helped shaped American history into what it is today. Although they were both very great influences to their community, they had their own ideologies and opinions concerning how racism, economic progress and education should be dealt with in their current society. W.E.B DuBois, as I've learned, was the more stern and unbending civil right activist, then the calm and flexible community leader Booker T. Washington. W.E.B. DuBois believed that the role of education for African-Americans should be in Liberal Arts Education.…
In addition, Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois fought for the same rights, but had…
Washington and William Edward Burghardt Du Bois ideas and work impacted in the fight for equality. In Booker T. Washington's case, he affects the short term fight. Although education is very important the majority of his community would be fed up with the racism that they would just give up. African Americans wanted to be equal in America. However, Washington's idea benefited and accommodated more of the Caucasian community than his own race. While W.E.B Du Bois affected the long term fight. he encouraged people to fight for their rights and stand up for themselves. Civil right moment evolving is what led to the end of segregation because many carried out the work after W.E.B Du…
I. Compare and contrast Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois by completing the information for each man on the chart below using p.631-633 in Out of Many and the Internet. You will need this background information in order to better understand excerpts from the works of these men.…
I choose W.E.B Dubois because he coined the phrase "the talented tenth" that described the likelihood of one in ten black men becoming leaders of their race . Dubois opposed Booker T. Washington 's Atlanta compromise , Dubois criticized Washington for not demanding equality for Africa American . Dubois strongly protested against lynching , Jim Crow laws , and discrimination in education and employment. His cause include people of color everywhere particularly African and Asian's. I chosed W.E.B Dubois because he was one of the most important African American activists during the 1st half of the 20th century, he also co founded the NAACP and today black men have more that a slight chance of becoming leaders of there race , after all…
These two prominent leaders in the up and rising African American population just could not see eye to eye. Dubois disagreed with Washington on what kind of education African Americans should receive, but on how they should start achieving it; he was much more thorough approach than Washington. Dubois was overbearing when compared to his opposite Washington, because he demanded and advocated for political and social reforms in order to gain equal rights for blacks. He strongly believed that African Americans must want their civil rights because they needed these rights to protect themselves. Washington on the other hand ignored discrimination, he felt African Americans should develop close relationships with whites to become prosperous in the…
On January 1, 1863, the United States’ Negro population was proclaimed “henceforth and forever free” according to President Abraham Lincoln’s establishment of the Emancipation Proclamation. However, years after its release, the Negro population was still mistreated. After the Civil War, white southerners were relentless in establishing themselves as the superior race. The newly implemented Black Codes restricted African Americans' of their new freedom and essentially began a new form of slavery. African Americans experienced violent discrimination and devastating poverty daily. In an attempt to diminish this oppression, two great and well respected leaders of the black community, Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. DuBois, offered contrasting approaches. Both methods contributed to the movement; however, one was more appropriate for the time period. Overall, Washington’s philosophy of self help and acceptance of discrimination was the better fit.…
In post-reconstruction America, many Black writers, ministers, teachers and others eloquently argued on behalf of freedom and justice for Black Americans, advocating various strategies for achieving racial and economic equality. Two such leaders who helped shape the political discourse were Ida B. Wells and Booker T. Washington. Urging politically divergent approaches, they both wanted African American people and men in particular, to be valued and respected by the white south. However, they differed significantly in the means by which they believed such change would come about. Ida B. Wells told the truth in a way that made many whites uncomfortable, addressing lynching and other racially motivated atrocities directly and proposing that African Americans collectively leverage economic power through strikes and boycotts, and individually protect themselves from lynches with weapons. In contrast, Washington was more conciliatory, appealing to whites to give African Americans the opportunity to prove their technical capacity and participate alongside whites as legitimate economic partners. While the “gradualist” gained unprecedented access to formal political power through his white benefactors, I believe Ida B. Wells’ argument that African Americans stop conceding power to whites was more persuasive in advancing racial equality for African Americans in post-reconstruction America.…
To begin with, Booker T. Washington and W.E.B DuBois were two important leaders in the Civil Rights Movement. They both had their opposing views on segregation and racism, yet they both wanted more rights and equality for African Americans. They both had a great goal that they wanted to meet. However, In my opinion, W.E.B. DuBois had a greater general idea on how to help African Americans. One of the reasons why I say this is because he was against segregation. Also, he founded the Niagara Movement, and he wanted African Americans to stand up for themselves.…
Booker T. Washington was also unhappy with the way the political system ran. He believed that blacks weren’t treated fairly because the political system went from the top to the bottom and he believed that it should begin at the bottom and then work its way up. He is undoubtedly the most important political figure in the 20th century. He had such a strong level of determination he knew that things could only get better for the Black community. He was sensitive to racial attitudes and had a strong will to not be defeated by white Americans who saw blacks as their enemies.…
Booker T. Washington was born a slave in the south, and W. E. B. Dubois was born free in the North. Their different births and upbringings would set the controversial stage for two men who were great leaders of the black community in the 19th and 20th centuries. They both…
Many great leaders came from the fight for African-Americans civil rights. Not all these leaders would agree with each other, but all of them had a common ground and that was to fight the oppression that blacks have had for many years. Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois were both civil rights leaders, however they had many different views they also had many similarities. Who were these leaders and what made them different but similar in many ways?…
W.E.B. DuBois and Booker T.Washington were both influential men during the Civil Rights movement. Even though they were both extremely influential, they both had contrasting points of views on which actions to take when it comes to racial equality. Booker T. Washington believed social equality would happen over time when the African Americans became economically well built and powerful. W.E.B. DuBois thought that political and social equality was necessary, so he came up with the movements such as the Niagara movement to push for equality. DuBois and Washington were both African American leaders who wanted there to be racial equality among everyone. Washington was the type of man that believed that the African Americans had to work hard and…
We should admire Booker T. Washington, an intelligent freed slave who rose above the criticisms of white men through much hard work. A few of his many accomplishments include when he founded the Tuskegee University and he was the first African-American to be invited to the Whitehouse. He was also President Roosevelt and President Taft’s adviser in racial…
Washington asked the white people for support not equality. Booker T. Washington believed that African-Americans would not make it any where in society if they focused solely on equality. Washington wanted to have blacks trained for society and real life situations; he thought that this would improve black’s lives greatly. Instead of blacks being looked at as solely useless individuals, they would gain knowledge of real world situations and how to handle them. He did not see white and black as a difference anyways, he wanted all people to be fairly the same. Washington wanted job-education for blacks so they could learn how to do their jobs and do it properly. No more whites teaching blacks how to ‘do their job,’ but for blacks to already have the knowledge they needed to be their own bosses or someone else’s…