1 In addition to this I had to speak before the church and Sunday-school, and at various other places.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter IV. 2 Her addition to the slave family attracted about as much attention as the purchase of a new horse or cow.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter I. 3 I not only attended the weekly debating society, but was instrumental in organizing an additional society.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter IV. 4 Before going to school it had never occurred to me that it was needful or appropriate to have an additional name.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter II. 5 In addition to this, I gave private lessons to several young men whom I was fitting to send to the Hampton Institute.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter IV. 6 There was no brickyard in the town, and in addition to our own needs there was a demand for bricks in the general market.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter X. 7 In addition to this, she worked among the older people in and near Tuskegee, and taught a Sunday school class in the town.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter IX. 8 After we had secured all the help that we could in Tuskegee, Miss Davidson decided to go North for the purpose of securing additional funds.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter IX. 9 In addition to the usual routine of teaching, I taught the pupils to comb their hair, and to keep their hands and faces clean, as well as their clothing.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter IV. 10 If I had been compelled to pay the seventy dollars for tuition, in addition to providing for my board, I would have been compelled to leave the Hampton school.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 11 In this way they would obtain a start in their books and a knowledge of some trade or industry, in addition to the other far-reaching benefits of the institution.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter VI. 12 It was enough for us to know that we were pleasing General Armstrong, and that we were making it possible for an additional number of students to secure an education.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter III. 13 As an additional result, hundreds of men are now scattered throughout the South who received their knowledge of mechanics while being taught how to erect these buildings.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter X. 14 Those delivered before the coloured people had for their main object the impressing upon them the importance of industrial and technical education in addition to academic and religious training.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter XIII. 15 In the plantation districts I found that, as a rule, the whole family slept in one room, and that in addition to the immediate family there sometimes were relatives, or others not related to the family, who slept in the same room.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter VII. 16 Soon after I began my first teaching in West Virginia I had picked out four of the brightest and most promising of my pupils, in addition to my two brothers, to whom I have already referred, and had given them special attention, with the view of having them go to Hampton.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter VI. 17 Even as a youth, and later in manhood, I had the feeling that it was cruelly wrong in the central government, at the beginning of our freedom, to fail to make some provision for the general education of our people in addition to what the states might do, so that the people would be the better prepared for the duties of citizenship.
Up From Slavery: An Autobiography By Booker T. WashingtonContextHighlight In Chapter V. 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.