Character Building

A number of years ago, when the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute was quite small, with only a few dozen students and two or three teachers, I began the practice of giving what were called Sunday Evening Talks to the students and teachers. These addresses were always delivered in a conversational tone and much in the same manner that I would speak to my own children around my fireside. As the institution gradually grew from year to year, friends suggested that these addresses ought to be preserved, and for that reason during the past few years they have been stenographically reported. For the purpose of this book they have been somewhat revised; and I am greatly indebted to my secretary, Mr. Emmett J. Scott, and to Mr. Max Bennett Thrasher, for assisting me in the revision and in putting them into proper shape for publication; and to Mr. T. Thomas Fortune for suggesting that these addresses be published in book form.

In these addresses I have attempted from week to week to speak straight to the hearts of our students and teachers and visitors concerning the problems and questions that confront them in their daily life here in the South. The most encouraging thing in connection with the making of these addresses has been the close attention which the students and teachers and visitors have always paid, and the hearty way in which they have spoken to me of the help that they have received from them.

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Character Building

A number of years ago, when the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute was quite small, with only a few dozen students and two or three teachers, I began the practice of giving what were called Sunday Evening Talks to the students and teachers. These addresses were always delivered in a conversational tone and much in the same manner that I would speak to my own children around my fireside. As the institution gradually grew from year to year, friends suggested that these addresses ought to be preserved, and for that reason during the past few years they have been stenographically reported. For the purpose of this book they have been somewhat revised; and I am greatly indebted to my secretary, Mr. Emmett J. Scott, and to Mr. Max Bennett Thrasher, for assisting me in the revision and in putting them into proper shape for publication; and to Mr. T. Thomas Fortune for suggesting that these addresses be published in book form.

In these addresses I have attempted from week to week to speak straight to the hearts of our students and teachers and visitors concerning the problems and questions that confront them in their daily life here in the South. The most encouraging thing in connection with the making of these addresses has been the close attention which the students and teachers and visitors have always paid, and the hearty way in which they have spoken to me of the help that they have received from them.

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Character Building

Character Building

by Booker T. Washington
Character Building

Character Building

by Booker T. Washington

Paperback

$19.45 
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Overview

A number of years ago, when the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute was quite small, with only a few dozen students and two or three teachers, I began the practice of giving what were called Sunday Evening Talks to the students and teachers. These addresses were always delivered in a conversational tone and much in the same manner that I would speak to my own children around my fireside. As the institution gradually grew from year to year, friends suggested that these addresses ought to be preserved, and for that reason during the past few years they have been stenographically reported. For the purpose of this book they have been somewhat revised; and I am greatly indebted to my secretary, Mr. Emmett J. Scott, and to Mr. Max Bennett Thrasher, for assisting me in the revision and in putting them into proper shape for publication; and to Mr. T. Thomas Fortune for suggesting that these addresses be published in book form.

In these addresses I have attempted from week to week to speak straight to the hearts of our students and teachers and visitors concerning the problems and questions that confront them in their daily life here in the South. The most encouraging thing in connection with the making of these addresses has been the close attention which the students and teachers and visitors have always paid, and the hearty way in which they have spoken to me of the help that they have received from them.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781636521336
Publisher: Black Legacy Press
Publication date: 08/28/2025
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.44(d)

About the Author

Booker T. Washington (1856–1915) was a prominent figure in the African American community and a champion of higher education. He was born into slavery and obtained freedom shortly after the Emancipation Proclamation. As a child, he worked manual jobs to help support his family, but aspired to receive a formal education. He enrolled in Hampton Normal Agricultural Institute in Virginia and thrived as a student. After graduating, Washington embarked on a career as a lecturer and leader of the Tuskegee Institute. He also worked as a political advisor to presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Taft.

Table of Contents

Introduction to the Transaction Edition xiii

Preface xli

1 Two Sides of Life 1

2 Helping Others 7

3 Some of the Rocks Ahead 13

4 On Influencing by Example 19

5 The Virtue of Simplicity 23

6 Have You Done Your Best? 29

7 Don't Be Discouraged 35

8 On Getting a Home 39

9 Calling Things by Their Right Names 43

10 European Impressions 49

11 The Value of System in Home Life 55

12 What Will Pay 59

13 Education that Educates 65

14 The Importance of Being Reliable 71

15 The Highest Education 77

16 Unimproved Opportunities 83

17 Keeping Your Word 91

18 Some Lessons of the Hour 97

19 The Gospel of Service 103

20 The Negro Conference 109

21 What Is to Be Our Future? 115

22 Some Great Little Things 121

23 To Would-Be Teachers 127

24 The Cultivation of Stable Habits 131

25 What You Ought to Do 135

26 Individual Responsibility 141

27 Getting on in the World 147

28 Each One His Part 151

29 What Would Father and Mother Say? 157

30 Object Lessons 163

31 Substance vs. Shadow 167

32 Character as Shown in Dress 171

33 Sing the Old Songs 175

34 Getting Down to Mother Earth 181

35 A Penny Saved 187

36 Growth 195

37 Last Words 199

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