- Washington Elementary School
- Booker T. Washington
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“Success is not measured by the position one has reached in life, rather by the obstacles one overcomes while trying to succeed.”
― Booker T. Washington
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Washington Elementary was named for Booker T. Washington (1856-1915), American educator and founder of the Tuskegee Institute. The original building opened in 1949; the present building opened in August 1989 as an incentive school. Washington became a magnet school in 1990 and offered magnet programs in math and science.
Booker Taliaferro Washington was born April 5, 1856, on a plantation in Franklin County, Virginia. Following the Civil War, his family moved to Malden, West Virginia, where he worked in a salt furnace and in coal mines, attending school whenever he could. He attended a newly founded school for African-Americans, Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute (now Hampton University). After graduation he taught for two years in Malden and then studied at Wayland Seminary in Washington, DC. In 1879 he became an instructor at Hampton Institute, where he helped to organize a night school and was in charge of the industrial training of 75 Native Americans. The school was so successful that in 1881 the founder of Hampton Institute appointed Washington the organizer and principal of a normal school in Tuskegee, Alabama, that eventually became known as the Tuskegee Institute. Washington made the institution into a major center for industrial and agricultural training. Washington became the chief spokesman for the African-American people, wrote several books (the most famous one his autobiography Up from Slavery) and became an advisor to two presidents. The site of the plantation where Washington was born now is a national monument.
Additional reading about Booker T. Washington: