After reading, the biography of Booker T. Washington, you will write a summary. Here are the steps: Read thearticleall the way through one time. Underline the major supporting details that support the...

1 answer below »

After reading, the biography of Booker T. Washington, you will write a summary. Here are the steps:



  1. Read thearticleall the way through one time.

  2. Underline the major supporting details that support the main ideas

  3. List the underlined sentences in order to put them in your summary.

  4. Change the sentences in number four to be expressed in your words.

  5. Use transition words to connect the major supporting details in your paper.

  6. Follow the steps inLecture Notes: Summary Writing PowerPointto create your summary.




3/7/22, 8:51 PM Topic - Image Bottom https://elearn.volstate.edu/d2l/le/content/8970119/viewContent/80359715/View 1/6 Dr. Booker Taliaferro Washington Founder and First President of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (now Tuskegee University) Term in Of�ce: 1881-1915 Booker T. Washington Born April 5, 1856, in Franklin County, Virginia, Booker Taliaferro was the son of an unknown White man and Jane, an enslaved cook of James Burroughs, a small planter. Jane named her son Booker Taliaferro but later dropped the second name. Booker gave himself the surname "Washington" when he �rst enrolled in school. Sometime after Booker's birth, his mother was married to Washington Ferguson, a slave. A daughter, Amanda, was born to this marriage. James, Booker's younger half-brother, was adopted. Booker's elder brother, John, was also the son of a White man. Booker spent his �rst nine years as a slave on the Burroughs farm. In 1865, his mother took her children to Malden, West Virginia, to join her husband, who had gone there earlier and found work in the salt mines. At age nine, Booker was put to work packing salt. Between the ages of ten and twelve, he worked in a coal mine. He attended school while continuing to work in the mines. In 1871, he went to work as a houseboy for the wife of Gen. Lewis Ruffner, owner of the mines. Securing an Education ... 3/7/22, 8:51 PM Topic - Image Bottom https://elearn.volstate.edu/d2l/le/content/8970119/viewContent/80359715/View 2/6 Samuel Chapman Armstrong In 1872, at age sixteen, Booker T. Washington entered Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in Virginia. The dominant personality at the school, which had opened in 1868 under the auspices of the American Missionary Association, was the principal, Samuel Chapman Armstrong, the son of American missionaries in Hawaii. Armstrong, who had commanded Black troops in the Civil War, believed that the progress of freedmen and their descendants depended on education of a special sort, which would be practical and utilitarian and would at the same time inculcate character and morality. Washington traveled most of the distance from Malden to Hampton on foot, arriving penniless. His entrance examination to Hampton was to clean a room. The teacher inspected his work with a spotless, white handkerchief. Booker was admitted. He was given work as a janitor to pay the cost of his room and board, and Armstrong arranged for a White benefactor to pay his tuition. At Hampton, Washington studied academic subjects and agriculture, which included work in the �elds and pigsties. He also learned lessons in personal cleanliness and good manners. His special interest was public speaking and debate. He was jubilant when he was chosen to speak at his commencement. The most important part of his experience at Hampton was his association with Armstrong, who he described in his autobiography as "a great man - the noblest, rarest human being it has ever been my privilege to meet." From Armstrong, Washington derived much of his educational philosophy. After graduating from Hampton with honors in 1875, Washington returned to Malden to teach. For eight months he was a student at Wayland Seminary, an 3/7/22, 8:51 PM Topic - Image Bottom https://elearn.volstate.edu/d2l/le/content/8970119/viewContent/80359715/View 3/6 institution with a curriculum that was entirely academic. This experience reinforced his belief in an educational system that emphasized practical skills and self-help. In 1879, Washington returned to Hampton to teach in a program for American Indians. Educating Others ... Physics Class at Tuskegee Institute In 1880, a bill that included a yearly appropriation of $2,000 was passed by the Alabama State Legislature to establish a school for Blacks in Macon County. This action was generated by two men - Lewis Adams, a former slave, and George W. Campbell, a former slave owner. On February 12, 1881, Governor Rufus Willis Cobb signed the bill into law, establishing the Tuskegee Normal School for the training of Black teachers. Armstrong was invited to recommend a White teacher as principal of the school. Instead, he suggested Washington, who was accepted. When Washington arrived at Tuskegee, he found that no land or buildings had been acquired for the projected school, nor was there any money for these purposes since the appropriation was for salaries only. Undaunted, Washington began selling the idea of the school, recruiting students and seeking support of local Whites. The school opened July 4, 1881, in a shanty loaned by a Black church, Butler A.M.E. Zion. With money borrowed from Hampton Institute's treasurer, Washington purchased an abandoned 100-acre plantation on the outskirts of Tuskegee. Students built a kiln, made bricks for buildings and sold bricks to raise money. Within a few years, they built a classroom building, a dining hall, a girl’s dormitory and a chapel. 3/7/22, 8:51 PM Topic - Image Bottom https://elearn.volstate.edu/d2l/le/content/8970119/viewContent/80359715/View 4/6 By 1888, the 540-acre Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute had an enrollment of more than 400 and offered training in such skilled trades as carpentry, cabinet- omaking, printing, shoemaking and tinsmithing. Boys also studied farming and dairying, while girls learned such domestic skills as cooking and sewing. Through their own labor, students supplied a large part of the needs of the school. In the academic departments, Washington insisted that efforts be made to relate the subject matter to the actual experiences of the students. Strong emphasis was placed on personal hygiene, manners and character building. Students followed a rigid schedule of study and work, arising at �ve in the morning and retiring at nine-thirty at night. Although Tuskegee was non-denominational, all students were required to attend chapel daily and a series of religious services on Sunday. Washington himself usually spoke to the students on Sunday evening. Olivia Davidson, a graduate of Hampton and Framingham State Normal School in Massachusetts, became teacher and assistant principal at Tuskegee in 1881. In 1885, Washington's older brother John, also a Hampton graduate, came to Tuskegee to direct the vocational training program. Other notable additions to the staff were acclaimed scientist Dr. George Washington Carver, who became director of the agriculture program in 1896; Emmett J. Scott, who became Washington 's private secretary in 1897; and Monroe Nathan Work, who became head of the Records and Research Department in 1908. Establishing a legacy ... Margaret Murray Washington 3/7/22, 8:51 PM Topic - Image Bottom https://elearn.volstate.edu/d2l/le/content/8970119/viewContent/80359715/View 5/6 On Tuskegee's 25th anniversary, Washington had transformed an idea into a 2,000- acre, eighty-three building campus that, combined with such personal property as equipment, live stock and stock in trade, was valued at $831,895. Tuskegee's endowment fund was $1,275,644 and training in thirty-seven industries was available for the more than 1,500 students enrolled that year. Through progress at Tuskegee, Washington showed that an oppressed people could advance. His concept of practical education was a contribution to the general �eld of education. His writings, which included 40 books, were widely read and highly regarded. Among his works was an autobiography titled "Up From Slavery" (1901), "Character Building" (1902), "My Larger Education" (1911), and "The Man Farthest Down" (1912).  Washington settled into the national scene on opening day of the Atlanta Exposition in 1895 when he spoke about "The New Negro," one with "the knowledge of how to live ... how to cultivate the soil, to husband their resources, and make the most of their opportunities." Eyebrows raised again on Oct. 16, 1901, when Washington became the �rst Black person to dine at the White House. Counsel to many U.S. presidents, he was there at the invitation of President Theodore Roosevelt. Washington was married three times. In 1882, he married his Malden sweetheart, Fannie Norton Smith. She died two years later, leaving an infant daughter, Portia (who married William Sidney Pittman, an architect, in 1907). In 1885, Washington married Hampton graduate Olivia Davidson, the assistant principal of Tuskegee, who died in 1889. Two sons were born to this marriage: Booker Taliaferro, Jr. and Ernest Davidson. In 1893, Washington married Fisk University graduate Margaret James Murray, who had come to Tuskegee as lady principal in 1889 and directed the programs for female students and initiated the Women's Meetings. Margaret Murray Washington died in 1925. Margaret and her husband's three children and four grandchildren survived Washington, who died November 14, 1915, at age �fty-nine of arteriosclerosis and exhaustion. He died after an illness in St. Luke's hospital, New York City, where he had been admitted on November 5. Aware that the end was near, he left with his wife and his physician, Dr. John A. Kennedy, Sr., on November 12, so that he could die in Tuskegee. Booker T. Washington's funeral on November 17, 1915 was held in the Tuskegee 3/7/22, 8:51 PM Topic - Image Bottom https://elearn.volstate.edu/d2l/le/content/8970119/viewContent/80359715/View 6/6 Institute Chapel, and was attended by nearly 8,000 people. He was buried on campus in a brick tomb, made by students, on a hill commanding a view of the entire campus. References  Dr. Booker Taliaferro Washington Founder and First President of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute. Tuskegee University. (n.d.). Retrieved September 29, 2021, from https://www.tuskegee.edu/discover-tu/tu-presidents/booker-t-washington. (https://www.tuskegee.edu/discover-tu/tu-presidents/booker-t-washington.) https://www.tuskegee.edu/discover-tu/tu-presidents/booker-t-washington.
Answered 3 days AfterMar 08, 2022

Answer To: After reading, the biography of Booker T. Washington, you will write a summary. Here are the steps:...

Dr. Saloni answered on Mar 12 2022
117 Votes
Running Head: Booker T. Washington 4
Summary: Booker T. Washington
This paper summarises the biography of Booker T. Washington, a civil rights leader and educator. He was born in 1856 in Virginia and died in 1915. He has been best recognised for introducing the Tuskegee Institute. Booker was born into servitude. Jane, his mother, and Washington, his stepfather, laboured on the Virginia plantation. He had two siblings: a sister and a brother. They all shared a single-room wooden hut, with the children sleeping on the dirty floor. While Booker was about five years of age, he began functioning for his owner (Cannon, 2021).
Washington was raised during a Civil War. Despite President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation emancipating the bond slaves, several bond slaves were not truly independent till the war finished. Union soldiers appeared at the property in the year 1865, while Washington was roughly 9 years old, and informed his household that they were now independent (Stob, 2018). Getting independent was magnificent, but for American-Africans in the South, it was just half the battle. Approximately 4 million...
SOLUTION.PDF

Answer To This Question Is Available To Download

Related Questions & Answers

More Questions »

Submit New Assignment

Copy and Paste Your Assignment Here