← hard words DuBoise Garvey Washington Export Options Alphabetize Word-Def Delimiter Tab Comma Custom Def-Word Delimiter New Line Semicolon Custom Data Copy and paste the text below. It is read-only. Select All In all things purely social we can be as separate as the five fingers, and yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress--Booker T. Washington Atlanta Compromise Twenty-nine men from fourteen states answered the call in Buffalo, New York Niagara Movement he main artery for distributing NAACP policy and news concerning Blacks which DuBois autocratically governed as its editor-in-chief for some twenty-five years Crisis magazine Inaugurate the opening of Black officer training schools, Bring forth legal action against lynchers, Set up a federal work plan for returning veterans. The results of DuBoise's writings in the Crisis after WWI born a mulatto slave in Franklin Country on 5th April, 1856. His father was an unknown white man and his mother, the slave of James Burroughs, a small farmer in Virginia birth of Booker T. Washington principal of the institute and opponent of slavery who had been commander of African American troops during the Civil War Samuel Armstrong a black political leader in Macon County, agreed to help two white Democratic Party candidates, William Foster and Arthur Brooks, to win a local election in return for the building of a Negro school in the area. Both men were elected and they then used their influence to secure approval for the building of the Tuskegee Institute. Lewis Adams The summer of 1919 when Twenty-five riots occurred between June and the end of the year Red Summer in 1887 in St. Ann's Bay, a small town on the northern coast of Jamaica, which was then a British colony to a father and maternal grandfather who worked as skilled stonemasons Garvey's birth St. Ann's Bay and the Church of England High School Garvey's education a printer in Kingston, a timekeeper on a banana plantation in Costa Rica, a newspaperman in Panama, and other jobs in Nicaragua, Honduras, Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador. he later moved to London, where he became an associate of Duse Mohammed Ali, the publisher of a monthly magazine, the Africa Times and Orient Review Garvey's jobs Episcopal priest who was the chaplain general of the UNIA George Alexander McGuire restaurants, a chain of cooperative grocery stores, a steam laundry, a dressmaking shop, a millinery store, a publishing house, and a toy company that manufactured black dolls Garvey's small businesses Black star line: the Frederick Douglass, Antonio Maceo, Shadyside, Phyllis Wheatley Garvey's steamship company, and the ships associated with it Clifford H. Plummer--broke up Trotter's plan; Richard T. Greener, Emmett Scott, --spied on niagra; Melvin J. Chisum--most active spy who tricked chase into becoming dependant on Washington; Booker T Washington's spies John D. Rockefeller, Collis P. Huntington, Jacob Henry Schiff, and Julius Rosenwald wealthy white philanthropists who donated to Tuskagee the leading black rights organization of that time who washington goaded into action during the Louisiana case Afro-American Council Giles v. Harris (1903) and Giles v. Teasley (1904) using lawyer Wilford H. Smith, and his private secretary Emmett J. Scott Alabama Suffrage cases a railroad president who was chairman of the Tuskegee Board of Trustees. Through him, Washington secured a private conference with the president of the Pullman Company, Abraham Lincoln's son Robert Todd Lincoln. William H. Baldwin, Jr An ultraconservative reverand who plead on behalf of Pink Franklin for clemency because of Washinton Richard Carroll Charles J. Bonaparte Roosevelt's attorney general editor of the anti-Booker newspaper, the Washington Bee W. Calvin Chase two of Washington's white liberal supporters who took a leading role in founding the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Oswald Garrison Villard and Mary White Ovington A social club of liberal whites and members of the darker races founded y Mary White Ovington who washington leaked to the press and caused controversy Cosmopolitan Club February 23, 1868 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts birth of DuBoise