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Collection Reference Number GLC04297.02
From Archive Folder Documents Relating to the 1910s 
Title Needs and progress of the Negro
Date 25 October 1915
Author Washington, Booker T. (1856-1915)  
Document Type Pamphlet
Content Description Printed leaflet of an address delivered by Washington at the annual meeting of the American Missionary Association. First page contains the New York address of the Missionary Association and a photograph of Washington. Text indicates that this is only part of Washington's presentation. Contents discuss race relations in America. Outlines the vast growth in academic opportunities for African-Americans since the Civil War, but stresses that much work still has to be done in funding schools for blacks: "There is sometimes much talk of the inferiority of the Negro. In practice, however, the idea appears to be that he is a sort of superman. He is expected, with about one-fifth or one-tenth of what the whites receive for their education, to make as much progress as they are making." Contains some marks in red pen. Previously contained within GLC04297.01.
Subjects Progressive Era  African American History  Education  
People Washington, Booker T. (1856-1915)  Goff, Lyman B. (1841-1927)  Thornton, Almira (1842-1921)  
Place written New Haven, Connecticut
Theme African Americans; Education; Religion
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1860-1945
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945
Related documents The Future of the American Negro