Up from Slavery: an autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about Up from Slavery.

Up from Slavery: an autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about Up from Slavery.

We have witnessed many spectacles within the last few days.  We have seen the magnificent grandeur and the magnificent achievements of one of the great metropolitan cities of the South.  We have seen heroes of the war pass by in procession.  We have seen floral parades.  But I am sure my colleagues will agree with me in saying that we have witnessed no spectacle more impressive and more encouraging, more inspiring for our future, than that which we have witnessed here this morning.

Some days after the President returned to Washington I received the letter which follows:—­

Executive Mansion, Washington, Dec. 23, 1899.

Dear Sir:  By this mail I take pleasure in sending you engrossed copies of the souvenir of the visit of the President to your institution.  These sheets bear the autographs of the President and the members of the Cabinet who accompanied him on the trip.  Let me take this opportunity of congratulating you most heartily and sincerely upon the great success of the exercises provided for and entertainment furnished us under your auspices during our visit to Tuskegee.  Every feature of the programme was perfectly executed and was viewed or participated in with the heartiest satisfaction by every visitor present.  The unique exhibition which you gave of your pupils engaged in their industrial vocations was not only artistic but thoroughly impressive.  The tribute paid by the President and his Cabinet to your work was none too high, and forms a most encouraging augury, I think, for the future prosperity of your institution.  I cannot close without assuring you that the modesty shown by yourself in the exercises was most favourably commented upon by all the members of our party.

With best wishes for the continued advance of your most useful and patriotic undertaking, kind personal regards, and the compliments of the season, believe me, always,

Very sincerely yours,

John Addison Porter,

Secretary to the President.

To President Booker T. Washington, Tuskegee Normal and Industrial
Institute, Tuskegee, Ala.

Twenty years have now passed since I made the first humble effort at Tuskegee, in a broken-down shanty and an old hen-house, without owning a dollar’s worth of property, and with but one teacher and thirty students.  At the present time the institution owns twenty-three hundred acres of land, one thousand of which are under cultivation each year, entirely by student labour.  There are now upon the grounds, counting large and small, sixty-six buildings; and all except four of these have been almost wholly erected by the labour of our students.  While the students are at work upon the land and in erecting buildings, they are taught, by competent instructors, the latest methods of agriculture and the trades connected with building.

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Up from Slavery: an autobiography from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.