Booker T. Washington Timeline
April 5, 1856
Booker T. WashingtonAmerican educator Booker T. Washington, c. 1906.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (neg. no. LC-USZ62-62933)1865
Freed after the American Civil War, Washington moves with his family to Malden, West Virginia.
1872
Hampton UniversityOgden Hall and the Circle of Nations are located on the campus of Hampton University in Hampton, Virginia.
Courtesy of Hampton University1875
Washington graduates from Hampton Institute. He returns to Malden to teach children at a day school and adults at night.
1878–79
Washington attends Wayland Seminary in Washington, D.C.
1879–81
Washington teaches at Hampton Institute.
1881
Booker T. WashingtonEducator and reformer Booker T. Washington was responsible for the early development and success of what is now Tuskegee University.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.1892
After the deaths of his first two wives, Washington marries a principal from Tuskegee Institute, Margaret James Murray. The marriage lasts until his death.
September 18, 1895
1896
Harvard University presents Washington with an honorary degree.
1900
The Story of My Life and Work, Washington’s first autobiography, is published.
1901
Washington’s second autobiography, Up from Slavery, is published. He also receives an honorary degree from Dartmouth College.
October 16, 1901
U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt invites Washington to the White House in order to get his advice about political appointments. Washington’s visit to the White House is greeted with a storm of protest as a “breach of racial etiquette.”
November 14, 1915
Washington dies in Tuskegee.
Booker T. Washington summary
Booker T. Washington summary
Booker T. Washington’s Achievements
Booker T. Washington | Achievements