| Term | Definition |
| 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 |