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.…
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.…
Booker T. Washington and W.E.B DuBois were two black persons who lived in different times in the Negros life in America, as slaves and as free slaves. Booker T. Washington was born a slave, but became a free slave, he, started to believed that Africans should work to win the respect of the whites. Also he, believed that blacks should just accept that whites are not responsible of why blacks are in a difficult economic and social situation, he said that "blacks should start from the bottom and work up". In the other hand, W.E.B DuBois was born a free slave who believed that Africans should study first instead of working, he had clear that blacks were going to be segregated from whites, but that didn’t stop him, due to this, he was a black…
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.…
W.E.B Du Bois and Booker T. Washington both were born around the same era and were accomplished scholars who fought for civil rights of African Americans. They came from two different walks of life and had two different views on how to uplift the black race. Washington was born into slavery in Virginia and DuBois was born in Massachusetts a free man. Their past shaped their views and philosophies on education and policies that would benefit African Americans. Both believed that Black Americans should have the same rights as Whites.…
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…
In the early history of the civil rights movement two men, Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois, offered solutions to the cold discrimination of blacks in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Washington taking the more incremental progressive approach was detested by Du Bois who took the radical approach of immediate and total equality both politically and economically. And although both views were needed for progress Washington's "don't rock the boat" approach seemed to be the most appropriate for the time.…
Booker T Washington and W.E.B Dubois were both born into slavery. They had many of the same life experiences. Despite them having experienced similar things growing up they had different views for the post-slavery Negro. Different views on how the Negros and Whites should co-exist.…
Benjamin Franklin and Booker T. Washington were both American personalities that assumed great importance in the history of the United States. Franklin was born in 1706, in Boston, to an English father and an American mother. Washington, on the other hand, having a family history of slaves, did not know his origins or anything about his ancestries. As the author himself says in his autobiography, “My life had its beginning in the midst of the most miserable, desolate, and discouraging surroundings.” (Washington, p.15). He only knew his mother, a brother and a sister and he did not even know the time or the place of his birth. In spite of some significant differences in their early lives and, after, along their trajectories, Benjamin Franklin and…
W.E.B. DuBois was the exact opposite of Washington. W.E.B. DuBois was the very first black Ph. D. graduate from Harvard University. DuBois was one of those African Americans that found Washington’s philosophies and teachings controversial, and he disagreed with him on many things. Offended by the ideas that Booker T. expressed in his Atlanta speech, DuBois saw Washington as someone that only wanted to please the white community and population. In response to Washington’s Atlanta speech, DuBois delivered the “Atlanta Compromise.” Within this speech he argued about how the acceptation of segregation and settling for achievement would not get the African American community anywhere. He thought that blacks should go after occupations in humanities and managerial/professional (white collar) fields. It was his thoughts that blacks must be politically, legally, and socially active in order to achieve equality. DuBois helped organize a group of black intellectuals known as the Niagara Movement; it was their goal to outline an agenda for African American progress in the US. In 1909, he was also an important part of the founding of the NAACP, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; they also devoted themselves to the progress of African…
As an activist, DuBois wrote many books and essays such as “The Talented Tenth” which asserted his philosophy that African Americans had a responsibility to educate themselves to become leaders in the black community. He stated, “From the very first it has been the educated and intelligent of the Negro people that have led and elevated the mass…” expressing that educated black men becoming leaders of their race brought change and advancement in the society. DuBois’s methods in regards of advancing African Americans in the American society was solely through urging the significance of education. He mentioned that “the best and most capable of their youth must be schooled in the colleges and universities of the land” which supported his argument that through developing a small group of educated blacks would help accomplish social change. Overall, Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois both wanted to help African Americans in the American society, but had different ways reaching this…
There is no way to fight for rights without making a statement. DeBois uses the example of Tuskegee University a lot, expressing that without the school, the Civil Rights movement would not have had a reasonable fight. “Without the initiative of the richer and wiser environing group, he cannot hope for great success”(pg 900). With no one who has received higher education, or has shown great power in that culture, there would be nothing to base the movement off of which proves the hypocrisy in Washington’s…
The status of the African-American increased little after Reconstruction. Some blacks were starting to accept their situation but two African American leaders did not. W.E.B Dubois and Booker T. Washington saw that the situation of poverty and social inequality were bringing down their race in the late 1800's and early 1900's. They came from completely different backgrounds, one rich and one a former slave, but they had the same purpose: they sought equality in the American society for African-Americans. Washington was more for slow integration into society and working your way up where as Dubois wanted immediate equality, which he thought the blacks deserved. Despite their differences two speakers would help to change the situation for their fellow African Americans from 1877 to 1915. Booker T. Washington was stronger on living in the moment, and making good then, when he could. W.E.B. Du Bois, wanted to make sure the future was acceptful of blacks.…
A world without a presidential figure, is a world where no one wants to live, a world with a dictator, a world where everyone has to live. Both american Presidents showed leadership even if one was better at it. A good President shows his american people that everything will be fine and okay and shows everything is under his control. Many presidents range on how they choose to do this. Such two presidents are Barack Obama and George Washington, these two presidents show many characteristics. Having similarities and differences they both shows love and affection for their country. racking down on employers that are taking advantage of undocumented workers because they can't complain if they're not paid a minimum wage...do it in a way that doesn't lead to people with Spanish surnames being discriminated against, so there's got to be a safeguard there.", stated Barack at a Democratic Debate. Both Ex-Presidents had interesting beliefs about many…