I am going to compare General George Washington and Captain John Paul Jones who were unique in a there own way where more or less the same so I will tell you what they have in common. First, I would like talk about General George Washington. George Washington was a brave man who was the General of the Continental Army unlike John Paul Jones who was a captain . Also, he was one of the reasons this country free.…
Thomas Jefferson had many goals for the Lewis and Clark Expedition, but the main goal was to find an all water route to the Pacific Ocean. Although they did not accomplish this goal, they did accomplish many more of their goals. One of the goals they fulfilled included taking notes of the lands economic potential during their expedition. Also, Lewis and Clark, both wrote diaries that reported wildlife, abundant resources, opportunities for trade, and other information about the Louisiana Purchase. The leaders of the expedition were chosen by President Thomas Jefferson, who had been thinking about discovering the Louisiana Purchase for a while. President Jefferson did not look any further than his personal secretary,…
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.…
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were sent on an expedition by President Thomas Jefferson soon after the Louisiana Purchase which was the first expedition of the westward Untied States. This was known as the Lewis and Clark Expedition, the main objective of this mission was to map the new territory, find a route across the western part of the continent, and establish American existence in the new territory.…
George Washington and Abraham Lincoln were two great wonderful men. They served two terms in their own time. Also they are memorize by statues, U.S., currency, and Mount Rushmore.…
“A little less complaint and whining, and a little more dogged work and manly striving, would do us more credit than a thousand civil bills.” This is a quote from W.E.B. Dubois that means everyone is equal and should have to work for their self. Booker T. Washington felt this way too because he hard working black slave. In this essay I will prove to you that Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Dubois have many similarities and differences. Washington was born as a slave in 1856.…
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.…
George Washington was one of America’s greatest leaders. He was born on February 22, 1732, in Westmoreland County, Virginia. Washington died December 14, 1799, in Mount Vernon, Virginia. He grew up to serve as general and commander in chief of the colonial armies during the American Revolution, and later became the first president of the United States of America. He led us to victory in the Revolutionary War. His strategies were amazing and still used today in the army.…
“… the Emancipation Proclamation seemed but to broaden and intensify the difficulties; and the War Amendments made the Negro problems of to-day” (11). The Emancipation Proclamation abolished slavery, but there was still loopholes to the system which allowed slavery and gave the open window for racism and inequality to still exist. This is because African Americans were never seen to be as an equal to the white man. Dubois also mentioned in one of his essays the importance of educating and training the black man. He spoke on this from a position where he believed that all men should obtain a skill and become educated to break the ongoing cycle of blacks not being educated. He provided statistics to show that African Americans can be successful when it comes to higher learning. “… there were, in the years from 1875 to 1800, 22 Negro graduates from Northern colleges; from 1885 to 1890 there were 43, and from 1895 to 1900, nearly 100 graduates. From Southern Negro colleges there were, in the same three periods, 143, 413, and over 500 graduates” (73-74). He expressed that black people could break the standard of being uneducated and not having the determination to…
As the great parts of the Afro-American history, Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois played the most important roles in the problem of Negro leadership of nineteenth- twentieth centuries. The Negro leadership problem caused considerable debate among Negro leaders: how to obtain first-class citizenship for the Negro American. Some black leaders encouraged Negroes to become skilled workers. Others advocated struggle for civil rights, especially the right to vote. In the theory it would lead to the economic and social rights. The two remarkable black men were presenting two opposite solutions of the most heated controversy in Negro leadership at that time. For two decades Washington was the founder and the trustworthy base of a dominant tone…
Lastly, Washington was born a slave. He lived the slave live for nine years. He knew what is was like to be a slave at that time and how hard the work was. How disrespectful the whites were to them. Dubois could not relate to this. He could relate to the discrimination thought because he was born a free man. Washington can relate to those who went through the slavery, gained their freedom and are still being treated like they're slaves and not getting equal rights. His approach towards it is better because he is respectful and his ideas are non threatening to either…
Washington presented his approach to an audience on September 18, 1895, when he delivered his Atlanta Compromise Address. In his address, Washington advised blacks to accept discrimination for the time being and concentrate on elevating themselves through hard work and an education and career in an industrial study, such as farming, enterprise, housekeeping, or thrift. He explained that this would earn the respect of whites and eventually incorporate them into society. Washington assured, “No race that has anything to contribute to the markets of the world is going to be in any degree ostracized” (Source D). DuBois, on the other hand, disagreed and argued that social change could only be accomplished by giving the black population a higher education and developing them into cultured individuals. Although well intentioned, DuBois’ plan was quite unrealistic. During this time period, over half of the black population above age nine was illiterate and only about 1/3 of Negros…
Theodore Roosevelt, Jane Addams, and W.E.B. Du Bois are three great progressive reformers. W.E.B. Du Bois and Jane Addams worked at making changes at the grassroots level while Theodore Roosevelt worked at making changed in the government level. These three reformers went about making changes in different ways, yet they all had the same goal: to solve economic and social problems that were plaguing the system. In the course book on page 677, it mentions the progressive reformers attacked the problems of the city on many fronts. Even though they had the same goal they were attacking problems in different area. I did some research and found an article titled, “Progressivism”, written by Sidney M. Milkis. In this article, it defines…
Washington was the nation’s most influential black leader. He had access to the most powerful political and business leaders in the United States. He would even become an advisor to the President. Washington was a former slave with no money who, with help; taught himself to read; was a very religious person; always the top student in his class; worked his way through school, and people admired him. Washington soothed white people and reassured black Americans as he counseled conciliation, patience, and agricultural and mechanical training as the most effective means to bridge the racial divide. His 1895 speech at the Cotton States Exposition in Atlanta elicited praise from both white and black listeners. (Darlene Clark Hine, et al., The African-American Odyssey, p. 443) Washington cleverly spoke in a way to raise up black aspirations without making white people fearful enough to kill and change laws. The south was only three decades out of the Civil War, and one of every three people was black. Many blacks in the south were kept illiterate and impoverished. Washington told whites that if they kept this up they will also be down. But, if they help lift blacks up, they and their community will also be lifted. He advised blacks to not be so distressed where they could not see the opportunity around them, and that their destiny was in the south. He also stated to cast down their buckets where they were in areas of trades and mechanics to live by production with their hands. During this time, black white collar workers such as lawyers could not find much work. Washington thought being a doctor was great, but stated; don't miss the opportunity in front of you right now. Washington also expressed to whites that black people have never treated them wrong and since their destiny rest in blacks, stop brutalizing them and help blacks get an education. Whites, at this time, feared blacks would vote and take over. Washington told whites…
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…