University of Illinois Press
 



   

 
Previous Section, Dec. 1902
Previous Section, Dec. 1902
  Next Chapter, Bibliography
Next Chapter, Bibliography
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 B 0 0 KER T. WASH INGTO N Papers and judge of the condition of the staves in that State. Some of the most dramatic operations of the famous ''Underground Railroad'' came under his personal observation. He enjoyed the rare privilege of being associated in labor for the race with that man of sainted memory, the Hon. Frederick Douglass. He met and heard many of the most notable men and women who labored to secure the freedom of the Negro. As a resident of California in the exciting years which immediately followed the discovery of gold, he watched the development of lawlessness there and its results. A few years later he went to British Columbia to live, when that colony was practically an unknown country. Returning to the United States, he was a witness to the excitin':, events connected with the years of Reconstruction in Florida, and an active participant in the events of that period in the State of Arkansas. At one time and another he has met many of the men who have been prominent in the direction of the affairs of both the great political parties of the country. In more recent years he has been able to see something of life in Europe, and in his official capacity as Unitecl States Consul to Tamatave, Madagascar, adjoining Africa, has resided for some time in that far-off and strange land. It would be difficult for any man who has had all these experiences not to be entertaining when he tells of them. Judge Gibbs has written an interesting book. Interspersed with the author's recollections and descriptions are various conclusions, as when he says: ''Labor to make yourself as indispensable as possible in all your relations with the dominant race, and color will cut less figure in your upward grade.'' ''Vice is ever destructive; ignorance ever a victim, and poverty ever defenseless.'' ''Only as we increase in property will our political barometer rise.'' It is significant to find one who has seen so much of the world as Judge Gibbs has, saying, as he does: ''With travel somewhat extensive and diversified, and with residence in tropical latitudes of Negro origin, I have a decided conviction, despite the crucial test to which he has been subjected in the past, and the present disadvantages under which he labors, that nowhere is the promise along all the lines of opportunity brighter for the American Negro than here in the land of his nativity.'' 622