In My Larger Education, Booker T. Washington explains how he came
by his positions on race relations, by describing the people who
influenced him during the founding of Tuskegee Normal and
Industrial Institute of Alabama. Washington was constantly, and
often bitterly, criticized by his contemporaries for being too
conciliatory to whites and not concerned enough about civil rights.
It would not be until after his death that the world would find out
that he had indeed worked a great deal for civil rights anonymously
behind the scenes.
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