The different methods Booker Taliaferro Washington and William Edward Burghardt Du Bois used to try and obtain racial equality reminds me of the Aesop’s Fable - The Hare and the Tortoise: A hare one day ridiculed the short feet and slow pace of the Tortoise‚ who replied‚ laughing: "Though you be swift as the wind‚ I will beat you in a race." The Hare‚ believing his assertion to be simply impossible‚ assented to the proposal; and they agreed that the Fox should choose the course and fix the goal.
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Booker T Washington was an educator born April 5‚ 1865. He was an author and wrote 50 books. He was born in Hale’s Ford Virginia. He died November 14‚ 1915. Booker was born into slavery in Virginia. His mother worked as a cook for the plantation owner and his father was a white man that no one knew. They lived in a one room log cabin. At a young age he was working and carrying 100 pound sacks of grain to the mill. Washington was so fascinated by learning and school. When he saw a schoolhouse near
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Booker T. Washington Presented By: Jeremy A. Clements Presented To: Ms. Alexander Date: February 21‚ 2011 Course: English 1 Booker T. Washington Booker T. Washington was born on plantation in Franklin Country‚ Virginia‚ on April 5‚ 1856. After the Civil War‚ his families moved to Malden‚ West Virginia‚ were Booker T. Washington worked in the coal mines and salt Furnaces‚ and a house servant. Washington mom and he were determined for him to go to school. During four years‚
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Booker T. Washington: The Educator Booker Taliaferro Washington was born in the time era when slavery was still legal and when born on a plantation‚ he was born into slavery. He worked as a child laborer on the plantation in harsh conditions. Once the Civil war was over‚ Washington was a freeman. However he continued to do manual labor while working in a coal mine. While listening in on a couple of fellow workers’ conversation about a college for blacks‚ he became so intrigued from the way the
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schools. More most blacks the emancipation and the ending of the civil war was a huge change; socially‚ economically and politically. In 1865 Booker T. Washington and his family moved to West Virginia where he worked as a salt packer. Booker was a former slave and an educator. In 1881‚ he founded the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. In 1872‚ Booker T. Washington left home and walked 500 miles to Hampton Normal Agricultural Institute in Virginia. Along the way he took odd jobs to take care of himself
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laws. Segregation was going on everywhere and there was no equality for blacks. Even through these times of trouble there were two dominant leaders in the African American community. Booker T. Washington was a well-known intellectual who was born an emancipated slave who became a self-made man. One could argue Washington was too practical. He believed that there was no way in the near term that whites would grant full equality to African-Americans‚ and therefore he should try to achieve what equality
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completely opposite both of them made huge changes in the segregation of the United States of America‚ the names Booker T. Washington and W.E.B Dubois will never be forgotten‚ As a consequence the rivalry between Booker T. Washington and W.E.B Du Bois is one well known to scholars and historians of the African American community. This paper compares and contrasts the ideals of Washington and Du Bois and identifies the difference between the two dealing with discrimination. In the early twentieth
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Georgia 1895‚ Booker T. Washington would deliver a speech called the “Atlanta Compromise Address”. Influential speech made by Washington and ant one point almost not allowed to be spoken‚ especially to an all white audience. However‚ having a black speaker would and should impress the Northerners and prove the racial changes in the south. Washington speech would provide the theory of “cast their buckets where they are” for all blacks. Beginnings to the end of Washington address‚ Washington use many
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W.E.B Du Bois and Booker T. Washington were intelligent men that wanted equality for black Americans‚ however the paths they wanted to take were polar opposites. Washington was against agitating the South‚ government‚ and white people as a whole. Washington believed that the South would not find a better workforce or grateful workers than that of former slaves. He called upon on black and white Americans to ‘cast down your bucket where you are (Washington 25). He wanted black Americans to look for
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Washington vs. DuBois Booker T. Washington and W.E.B Dubois had different views on how they were going to work towards equality for blacks. Booker T was the dominant african american leader from 1890 to 1915. Dubois graduated from Harvard University and was the leader of the Niagara Movement. Booker T wanted the blacks to work for their equality. “No race can prosper till it learns that there is as much dignity in tilling a field as in writing a poem. It is at the bottom of life we must
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