Previous Section, Nov. 1892
Previous Section, Nov. 1892
  Next Chapter, Jan. 1893
Next Chapter, Jan. 1893
Go to Table of Contents
Go to Table of Contents    
Print a lo-res (300 dpi x 150 dpi) PDF image of this page
   

 

 

The page presentation framework of the Booker T. Washington papers is designed to provide researchers worldwide with searchable access to the thousands of pages comprising the fourteen volumes, most of which are out of print. Adapted from the National Academy Press's Open Book framework, this framework allows searching down to the page level, provides sorting of search results chronologically, enables easy navigation across multiple volumes, and allows page-by-page local printing (via PDF) of every page.

[ Top of Page ] [ Home ] [ Contact Us ] [ Help ]

©2000 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
All rights reserved


OCRed data provided for searching only.
The BOOKER T. WASHINGTON Papers lecturer in the Phelps Hall Bible School for many years. He was listed, for example, in the 1898-99 Tuskegee catalog in that capacity. 2 R. R. Morris was an A.M.E. Zion minister in Montgomery, pastor of the Old Ship Church. In 18 he worked in support of the State Colored University's claim to a share of the Morrill Act funds. To Warren Logan Crawford House Boston, Dec. 7 189 Dear Mr. Logan: I have rec'd your telegrams regarding Miss Shaw's death and Miss Mason's gift. It is very sad about Miss Shawl I hope to attend her funeral in N.Y. Miss Mason's gift I know is very timely and helpful. I telegraphed you tonight to reserve one half of it for the land payment. We must take no risks on that. If they want it I wish you would try to pay the new teachers in full. I had a telegram today from Mr. Campbell saying that our bills had passed the legislature. Yours truly B. T. Washington ALS Con. 6 BTW Papers ATT. Original destroyed. ~ Either Ellen Francis or Ida Means Mason. 2 See An Act to Incorporate Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, Dec. ~3, 1892, belong. From Mary A. Elliott Columbus Dec gth 1892 My Dear Brother, I am ever so glad to hear from you. I suppose that you was in the east from reading the little Student. Is my wound Well? not entirely, but can say that it is a great deal better and I fee! to praise the Heavenly Father for His Great mercies toward me. I can walk around in the house without my cruches, somthing that I dident expect to do this winter want to visit Mother to day if I can. We are all as well as usal. Dock is not feeling so well this Winter, but still keeps going. I often tell him that we ought not to complain. When I 2