Similarities Between Booker T. Washington And Jane Addams

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Throughout the history of the United States, there have been individuals who have sought out to better society and develop solutions for social and economic problems. In all communities, there are clear distinctions between the privileged and poor. Many times these less fortunate individuals fail to rise up in the world because of the few opportunities they are given. Despite this, some individuals become empowered and impassioned by the hardships seen and have a yearning to create the change needed for the betterment of society. Two leading historical examples of such individuals include Booker T. Washington and Jane Addams. Booker T. Washington had established the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, a school for colored people where a heavy emphasis …show more content…

Washington wanted to ensure the white race that education of colored individuals would not lead to a decrease in domestic services, as this was one of the main fears presented throughout. The beginning of the Institute started with only Washington as the teacher, and thirty students (Washington 58). While the Tuskegee Institute did an excellent job in developing students minds and reading abilities, Washington wanted to also teach his students practical life skills. Understanding that his students came from homes with little opportunities, Washington made it a priority to teach students how to care for their themselves. Students were taught how to bathe, care for their teeth, wash their clothing, and even what to eat and how to eat properly (Washington 61). Along with these basic skills, students were taught in a way so they could both become teachers and return to the plantation districts (Washington 61). Rather than simply studying books, students engaged in labor and physically saw what it meant to pave one’s own way. Washington wanted to implement a set of agricultural skills that would allow students to gain a new set of ideas and energy that could improve the industry. Soon after Washington found a new location to move his growing school, students were in charge of completing all the chores needed to successfully move to the farm. While …show more content…

Through farming, students were able to both provide meals for themselves, and make enough money to allow them to continue their education at Tuskegee (Washington 67). Washington wanted the students to participate in agricultural and domestic work, along with constructing their own buildings (Washington 71). In doing so, students would not only help benefit the school, but also learn to love their work and discover the new way of working alongside the forces of nature (Washington 72). In this bold experiment, Washington’s theory proved to be true, as students left the Institute with a new found knowledge on construction, drawing, and mechanics of building. Washington had also undertaken a new task, one of making bricks with no money or experience (Washington 73). Brickmaking soon became a key industry at the Tuskegee Institute, even improving race relations. While white southerners had no contact with the Institute, they began to buy their bricks and saw that the education of colored individuals added value and wealth to the community (Washington 74). Washington’s concept of industrial education is seen throughout the expansion of the Tuskegee Institute, as students have even helped build buggies, wagons, and carts (Washington 75). The building of these vehicles helped not only the school, but also the community, as they were used in local markets. In his Autobiography,

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