[Up From Slavery: An Autobiography by Booker T. Washington]@TWC D-Link book
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography

CHAPTER XVII
11/31

The work which Professor Booker T.
Washington has accomplished for the education, good citizenship, and popular enlightenment in his chosen field of labour in the South entitles him to rank with our national benefactors.

The university which can claim him on its list of sons, whether in regular course or honoris causa, may be proud.
It has been mentioned that Mr.Washington is the first of his race to receive an honorary degree from a New England university.

This, in itself, is a distinction.

But the degree was not conferred because Mr.
Washington is a coloured man, or because he was born in slavery, but because he has shown, by his work for the elevation of the people of the Black Belt of the South, a genius and a broad humanity which count for greatness in any man, whether his skin be white or black.
Another Boston paper said:-- It is Harvard which, first among New England colleges, confers an honorary degree upon a black man.

No one who has followed the history of Tuskegee and its work can fail to admire the courage, persistence, and splendid common sense of Booker T.Washington.
Well may Harvard honour the ex-slave, the value of whose services, alike to his race and country, only the future can estimate.
The correspondent of the New York Times wrote:-- All the speeches were enthusiastically received, but the coloured man carried off the oratorical honours, and the applause which broke out when he had finished was vociferous and long-continued.
Soon after I began work at Tuskegee I formed a resolution, in the secret of my heart, that I would try to build up a school that would be of so much service to the country that the President of the United States would one day come to see it.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books