1 The young men and women were determined to secure an education at any cost.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 2 Mrs. Ruffner always encouraged and sympathized with me in all my efforts to get an education.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 3 Without any unusual occurrence I reached Hampton, with a surplus of exactly fifty cents with which to begin my education.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 4 She had so often expressed the wish that she might be permitted to live to see her children educated and started out in the world.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter IV. 5 It was soon learned that he possessed considerable education, and he was engaged by the coloured people to teach their first school.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. 6 I have known of still other cases in which the former slaves have assisted in the education of the descendants of their former owners.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter I. 7 In fact, the greater part of the education I secured in my boyhood was gathered through the night-school after my day's work was done.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. 8 In the midst of my struggles and longing for an education, a young coloured boy who had learned to read in the state of Ohio came to Malden.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. 9 These were the questions of a home, a living, the rearing of children, education, citizenship, and the establishment and support of churches.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter I. 10 Few people who were not right in the midst of the scenes can form any exact idea of the intense desire which the people of my race showed for an education.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. 11 I determined, when quite a small child, that, if I accomplished nothing else in life, I would in some way get enough education to enable me to read common books and newspapers.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. 12 The older I grow, the more I am convinced that there is no education which one can get from books and costly apparatus that is equal to that which can be gotten from contact with great men and women.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 13 At any rate, I here repeat what I have said more than once before, that the lessons that I learned in the home of Mrs. Ruffner were as valuable to me as any education I have ever gotten anywhere else.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 14 There was never a time in my youth, no matter how dark and discouraging the days might be, when one resolve did not continually remain with me, and that was a determination to secure an education at any cost.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. 15 One might have removed from Hampton all the buildings, class-rooms, teachers, and industries, and given the men and women there the opportunity of coming into daily contact with General Armstrong, and that alone would have been a liberal education.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 16 Any one who is willing to work ten hours a day at the brick-yard, or in the laundry, through one or two years, in order that he or she may have the privilege of studying academic branches for two hours in the evening, has enough bottom to warrant being further educated.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter XIII. 17 Many children of the tenderest years were compelled then, as is now true I fear, in most coal-mining districts, to spend a large part of their lives in these coal-mines, with little opportunity to get an education; and, what is worse, I have often noted that, as a rule, young boys who begin life in a coal-mine are often physically and mentally dwarfed.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. Your search result may include more than 17 sentences. If you upgrade to a VIP account, you will see up to 500 sentences for one search.