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Link Page |
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Education
- | Booker T. Washington, Up from Slavery, 1901, Ch. 8, "Teaching School in a Stable and a Hen House" |
- | Frances Benjamin Johnston, photographs of students and teachers at Tuskegee Institute, Alabama, 1902 |
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Links
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Washington: etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/WasSlav.html
Johnston: PDF file* nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/maai2/institutions/text4/johnston.pdf
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Online Sources
| Washington: Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library
Johnston: National Humanities Center
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Printing
| If you choose to print these texts:
- Print directly from the sites.
- Length: 9 pages.
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Supplemental sites
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Brief overview of historically black colleges in the U.S., from Africana.com
Yahoo list of HBCUs (Historically Black Colleges and Universities)
History of Tuskegee University, from Tuskegee
Tuskegee Institute photographs by Johnston in the Library of Congress - from this search page, scroll down to "Searching Numbers" at the bottom of the page and enter LOT 2962
Hampton Institute photographs by Johnston
in the Library of Congress - from this search page, scroll down to "Searching Numbers" at the bottom of the page and enter LOT 11051
Selected Johnston photographs and background from the Library of Congress
Brief biography of Johnston from UCR/California Museum of Photography
Evidences of Progress among Colored People, by G. F. Richings, 1902, ch. 1-14, 28-32
Biography of Washington, in Documenting the American South, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries
The Booker T. Washington Papers, with texts, photographs, and links; from the University of Illinois Press
Up from Slavery, full text on one web page, with illustrations, in Documenting the American South, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries
African American History and Literature, 1865-1917: Online Resources
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 | *PDF file - You will need software on your computer that allows you to read and print Portable Document Format (PDF) files, such as Adobe Acrobat Reader. If you do not have this software, you may download it FREE from Adobe's Web site. |
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