Booker T. Washington

NOUN
  1. United States educator who was born a slave but became educated and founded a college at Tuskegee in Alabama (1856-1915)
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How To Use Booker T. Washington In A Sentence

  • By joining Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, and Richard Wright in the act of literary testimony, Malcolm became part of the most essential genre of African-American literature.
  • Mrs. Booker T. Washington, but they were women that were more like what you would call the dowager or the ladylike type of thing. Oral History Interview with Modjeska Simkins, November 15, 1974. Interview G-0056-1. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • By joining Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, and Richard Wright in the act of literary testimony, Malcolm became part of the most essential genre of African-American literature.
  • Booker T. Washington made his mark with the infamous “Atlanta Compromise” speech, in which he entreated black Southerners to “cast down their bucket where [they were]” and accommodate white Southerners in hope of obtaining equality through humility and diligence. W. E. B. Du Bois & Booker T. Washington: Two Sides of the Same Coin | Edwardian Promenade
  • Booker T. Washington, the renowned black educator, was an outstanding example of this truth.
  • My father's "pastoral momentum" was driven by Holy Scripture and the philosophy of Booker T. Washington. Marian Wright Edelman: What the Inauguration of Barack Obama Means
  • In the early twentieth century Booker T. Washington's accommodationist philosophy dominated discussions of racial progress.
  • Dad's hero was the great black educator Booker T. Washington.
  • An admirer of both Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois, he once wrote a poem about the militant white abolitionist John Brown, which he dedicated to the black accommodationist Washington.
  • Yet to the extent that Booker T. Washington (1856-1915) is remembered at all today, he is usually misremembered, which is a travesty. The Wizard of Tuskegee
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