When the Saints Go Hobbling In: Emmett Jay Scott and the Booker T. Washington Movement

Challenging several of the commonly held views about Booker T. Washington and his followers, this collection of essays offers a new estimation of their accomplishments and successes as having been greater than previously recognized by historians. Criticized for his gradual approach and often called an accommodationist in his own time, Booker T. Washington’s influence on civil rights was nonetheless significant and his writing continues to educate on the efforts of post-Emancipation America. The book explores his connections with presidents, such as Theodore Roosevelt and Calvin Coolidge, and examines the issues of black entrepreneurship in both in the United States and Africa—providing guidance for today's African American community to seek a way and means to deal with economic dislocation and despair. It also presents a thorough study of Washington’s secretary, Emmett Jay Scott, whose own influence as a leader continued well into the modern era through his familial connections to the Black Panther Party. This important collection will round out scholarly studies of Booker T. Washington and the movement he created with the fresh perspective it presents.

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When the Saints Go Hobbling In: Emmett Jay Scott and the Booker T. Washington Movement

Challenging several of the commonly held views about Booker T. Washington and his followers, this collection of essays offers a new estimation of their accomplishments and successes as having been greater than previously recognized by historians. Criticized for his gradual approach and often called an accommodationist in his own time, Booker T. Washington’s influence on civil rights was nonetheless significant and his writing continues to educate on the efforts of post-Emancipation America. The book explores his connections with presidents, such as Theodore Roosevelt and Calvin Coolidge, and examines the issues of black entrepreneurship in both in the United States and Africa—providing guidance for today's African American community to seek a way and means to deal with economic dislocation and despair. It also presents a thorough study of Washington’s secretary, Emmett Jay Scott, whose own influence as a leader continued well into the modern era through his familial connections to the Black Panther Party. This important collection will round out scholarly studies of Booker T. Washington and the movement he created with the fresh perspective it presents.

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When the Saints Go Hobbling In: Emmett Jay Scott and the Booker T. Washington Movement

When the Saints Go Hobbling In: Emmett Jay Scott and the Booker T. Washington Movement

by Maceo Crenshaw Dailey
When the Saints Go Hobbling In: Emmett Jay Scott and the Booker T. Washington Movement

When the Saints Go Hobbling In: Emmett Jay Scott and the Booker T. Washington Movement

by Maceo Crenshaw Dailey

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$13.95 
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Overview

Challenging several of the commonly held views about Booker T. Washington and his followers, this collection of essays offers a new estimation of their accomplishments and successes as having been greater than previously recognized by historians. Criticized for his gradual approach and often called an accommodationist in his own time, Booker T. Washington’s influence on civil rights was nonetheless significant and his writing continues to educate on the efforts of post-Emancipation America. The book explores his connections with presidents, such as Theodore Roosevelt and Calvin Coolidge, and examines the issues of black entrepreneurship in both in the United States and Africa—providing guidance for today's African American community to seek a way and means to deal with economic dislocation and despair. It also presents a thorough study of Washington’s secretary, Emmett Jay Scott, whose own influence as a leader continued well into the modern era through his familial connections to the Black Panther Party. This important collection will round out scholarly studies of Booker T. Washington and the movement he created with the fresh perspective it presents.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780988333116
Publisher: Sweet Earth Flying Press, LLC
Publication date: 08/01/2013
Pages: 150
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.20(d)

About the Author

Maceo Crenshaw Dailey, Jr. has taught at prestigious universities and colleges that include Boston College, Brown University, Howard University, and Spelman College. He is the director of the African American Studies Program and an associate professor of history at the University of Texas at El Paso. He has made significant contributions to writing on Emmett Jay Scott and Booker T. Washington, including a prize-winning scholarly essay in Atlanta History: A Journal of Georgia and the South. He lives in El Paso, Texas.

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