Booker T. Washington's Atlanta Exposition Address

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Booker T. Washington’s Atlanta Exposition Address of 1895 remains one of the most influential speeches to this day. The address spoke about the importance of economic independence and coexisting with others to progress in racial equality in the post-Reconstruction South. In his speech, he stated the famous quote, “cast down your bucket where you are.” In this quote, Washington accurately emphasized the idea of self-reliance and resourcefulness for African-Americans, despite critics’ opposing values. Booker T. Washington urged other African Americans like himself to progress with what they already had instead of relying on other people and external sources in his quote, “cast your bucket where you are.” Washington directly stated his reasoning …show more content…

Booker T. Washington and Others”). DuBois viewed Washington’s economic standpoint on the progress of the African American people as ignorant of the social injustices that African Americans faced at the time. “Cast down your bucket where you are” is an extremely valuable statement for the African Americans of the late nineteenth century because it encouraged them to stop depending on their relationships with others and other lands and focus on being successful and prepared for what is to come with what was given to them. Washington stated in his address that, “It is important and right that all privileges of the law be ours, but it is vastly more important that we be prepared for the exercise of these privileges,” (Washington, Atlanta Exposition Address of 1895). By starting to follow what they already had and not blindly listening to another source, they now could properly take full advantage of the new rights that were given to them coming out of slavery and also prepare for the developments and racial progress that are to come in the

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