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Vocational Education

Exhibits    

Initially, higher education for African Americans trained them to be teachers of and leaders in vocational education. This practice reflected the view that opportunities for African Americans would continue to be limited.

One of the most influential and controversial proponents of vocational education was Booker T. Washington (1856-1915). Born into a slave family in Franklin County, Washington attended Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute (1872-75) and went on to develop Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute on the Hampton model. Washington believed that blacks should be educated for industrial and agricultural work. He was criticized for emphasizing vocational education at the expense of academic development and civil rights. Washington’s autobiography, Up from Slavery (1901), was translated into many languages and influenced, among others, the educational philanthropist Julius Rosenwald.

Exhibit Items

UVA Library
1914 Campbell County school fair
UVA Library
Exhibition at Henrico County Training School
Amelia Pride
Permilia "Amelia" Elizabeth Perry Pride
T Pierce Cooking School
Theresa Pierce Cooking School, c. 1910
Book Food What It Is And What It Does
Food, What It Is
 and Does
Wooden spoon
Spoon
Mason Jar
Mason Jar
Pamplet Happy Health
Happy Healthy Womanhood
Muffin Tins
Muffin tins
Apron
Apron