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<h2> Chapter III. The Struggle For An Education </h2>
<p>One day, while at work in the coal-mine, I happened to overhear two miners
talking about a great school for coloured people somewhere in Virginia.
This was the first time that I had ever heard anything about any kind of
school or college that was more pretentious than the little coloured
school in our town.</p>
<p>In the darkness of the mine I noiselessly crept as close as I could to the
two men who were talking. I heard one tell the other that not only was the
school established for the members of any race, but the opportunities that
it provided by which poor but worthy students could work out all or a part
of the cost of a board, and at the same time be taught some trade or
industry.</p>
<p>As they went on describing the school, it seemed to me that it must be the
greatest place on earth, and not even Heaven presented more attractions
for me at that time than did the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute
in Virginia, about which these men were talking. I resolved at once to go
to that school, although I had no idea where it was, or how many miles
away, or how I was going to reach it; I remembered only that I was on fire
constantly with one ambition, and that was to go to Hampton. This thought
was with me day and night.</p>
<p>After hearing of the Hampton Institute, I continued to work for a few
months longer in the coal-mine. While at work there, I heard of a vacant
position in the household of General Lewis Ruffner, the owner of the
salt-furnace and coal-mine. Mrs. Viola Ruffner, the wife of General
Ruffner, was a "Yankee" woman from Vermont. Mrs. Ruffner had a reputation
all through the vicinity for being very strict with her servants, and
especially with the boys who tried to serve her. Few of them remained with
her more than two or three weeks. They all left with the same excuse: she
was too strict. I decided, however, that I would rather try Mrs. Ruffner's
house than remain in the coal-mine, and so my mother applied to her for
the vacant position. I was hired at a salary of $5 per month.</p>
<p>I had heard so much about Mrs. Ruffner's severity that I was almost afraid
to see her, and trembled when I went into her presence. I had not lived
with her many weeks, however, before I began to understand her. I soon
began to learn that, first of all, she wanted everything kept clean about
her, that she wanted things done promptly and systematically, and that at
the bottom of everything she wanted absolute honesty and frankness.
Nothing must be sloven or slipshod; every door, every fence, must be kept
in repair.</p>
<p>I cannot now recall how long I lived with Mrs. Ruffner before going to
Hampton, but I think it must have been a year and a half. 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. Even to this day I never see
bits of paper scattered around a house or in the street that I do not want
to pick them up at once. I never see a filthy yard that I do not want to
clean it, a paling off of a fence that I do not want to put it on, an
unpainted or unwhitewashed house that I do not want to paint or whitewash
it, or a button off one's clothes, or a grease-spot on them or on a floor,
that I do not want to call attention to it.</p>
<p>From fearing Mrs. Ruffner I soon learned to look upon her as one of my
best friends. When she found that she could trust me she did so
implicitly. During the one or two winters that I was with her she gave me
an opportunity to go to school for an hour in the day during a portion of
the winter months, but most of my studying was done at night, sometimes
alone, sometimes under some one whom I could hire to teach me. Mrs.
Ruffner always encouraged and sympathized with me in all my efforts to get
an education. It was while living with her that I began to get together my
first library. I secured a dry-goods box, knocked out one side of it, put
some shelves in it, and began putting into it every kind of book that I
could get my hands upon, and called it my "library."</p>
<p>Notwithstanding my success at Mrs. Ruffner's I did not give up the idea of
going to the Hampton Institute. In the fall of 1872 I determined to make
an effort to get there, although, as I have stated, I had no definite idea
of the direction in which Hampton was, or of what it would cost to go
there. I do not think that any one thoroughly sympathized with me in my
ambition to go to Hampton unless it was my mother, and she was troubled
with a grave fear that I was starting out on a "wild-goose chase." At any
rate, I got only a half-hearted consent from her that I might start. The
small amount of money that I had earned had been consumed by my stepfather
and the remainder of the family, with the exception of a very few dollars,
and so I had very little with which to buy clothes and pay my travelling
expenses. My brother John helped me all that he could, but of course that
was not a great deal, for his work was in the coal-mine, where he did not
earn much, and most of what he did earn went in the direction of paying
the household expenses.</p>
<p>Perhaps the thing that touched and pleased me most in connection with my
starting for Hampton was the interest that many of the older coloured
people took in the matter. They had spent the best days of their lives in
slavery, and hardly expected to live to see the time when they would see a
member of their race leave home to attend a boarding-school. Some of these
older people would give me a nickel, others a quarter, or a handkerchief.</p>
<p>Finally the great day came, and I started for Hampton. I had only a small,
cheap satchel that contained a few articles of clothing I could get. My
mother at the time was rather weak and broken in health. I hardly expected
to see her again, and thus our parting was all the more sad. She, however,
was very brave through it all. At that time there were no through trains
connecting that part of West Virginia with eastern Virginia. Trains ran
only a portion of the way, and the remainder of the distance was travelled
by stage-coaches.</p>
<p>The distance from Malden to Hampton is about five hundred miles. I had not
been away from home many hours before it began to grow painfully evident
that I did not have enough money to pay my fare to Hampton. One experience
I shall long remember. I had been travelling over the mountains most of
the afternoon in an old-fashion stage-coach, when, late in the evening,
the coach stopped for the night at a common, unpainted house called a
hotel. All the other passengers except myself were whites. In my ignorance
I supposed that the little hotel existed for the purpose of accommodating
the passengers who travelled on the stage-coach. The difference that the
colour of one's skin would make I had not thought anything about. After
all the other passengers had been shown rooms and were getting ready for
supper, I shyly presented myself before the man at the desk. It is true I
had practically no money in my pocket with which to pay for bed or food,
but I had hoped in some way to beg my way into the good graces of the
landlord, for at that season in the mountains of Virginia the weather was
cold, and I wanted to get indoors for the night. Without asking as to
whether I had any money, the man at the desk firmly refused to even
consider the matter of providing me with food or lodging. This was my
first experience in finding out what the colour of my skin meant. In some
way I managed to keep warm by walking about, and so got through the night.
My whole soul was so bent upon reaching Hampton that I did not have time
to cherish any bitterness toward the hotel-keeper.</p>
<p>By walking, begging rides both in wagons and in the cars, in some way,
after a number of days, I reached the city of Richmond, Virginia, about
eighty-two miles from Hampton. When I reached there, tired, hungry, and
dirty, it was late in the night. I had never been in a large city, and
this rather added to my misery. When I reached Richmond, I was completely
out of money. I had not a single acquaintance in the place, and, being
unused to city ways, I did not know where to go. I applied at several
places for lodging, but they all wanted money, and that was what I did not
have. Knowing nothing else better to do, I walked the streets. In doing
this I passed by many food-stands where fried chicken and half-moon apple
pies were piled high and made to present a most tempting appearance. At
that time it seemed to me that I would have promised all that I expected
to possess in the future to have gotten hold of one of those chicken legs
or one of those pies. But I could not get either of these, nor anything
else to eat.</p>
<p>I must have walked the streets till after midnight. At last I became so
exhausted that I could walk no longer. I was tired, I was hungry, I was
everything but discouraged. Just about the time when I reached extreme
physical exhaustion, I came upon a portion of a street where the board
sidewalk was considerably elevated. I waited for a few minutes, till I was
sure that no passers-by could see me, and then crept under the sidewalk
and lay for the night upon the ground, with my satchel of clothing for a
pillow. Nearly all night I could hear the tramp of feet over my head. The
next morning I found myself somewhat refreshed, but I was extremely
hungry, because it had been a long time since I had had sufficient food.
As soon as it became light enough for me to see my surroundings I noticed
that I was near a large ship, and that this ship seemed to be unloading a
cargo of pig iron. I went at once to the vessel and asked the captain to
permit me to help unload the vessel in order to get money for food. The
captain, a white man, who seemed to be kind-hearted, consented. I worked
long enough to earn money for my breakfast, and it seems to me, as I
remember it now, to have been about the best breakfast that I have ever
eaten.</p>
<p>My work pleased the captain so well that he told me if I desired I could
continue working for a small amount per day. This I was very glad to do. I
continued working on this vessel for a number of days. After buying food
with the small wages I received there was not much left to add on the
amount I must get to pay my way to Hampton. In order to economize in every
way possible, so as to be sure to reach Hampton in a reasonable time, I
continued to sleep under the same sidewalk that gave me shelter the first
night I was in Richmond. Many years after that the coloured citizens of
Richmond very kindly tendered me a reception at which there must have been
two thousand people present. This reception was held not far from the spot
where I slept the first night I spent in the city, and I must confess that
my mind was more upon the sidewalk that first gave me shelter than upon
the recognition, agreeable and cordial as it was.</p>
<p>When I had saved what I considered enough money with which to reach
Hampton, I thanked the captain of the vessel for his kindness, and started
again. Without any unusual occurrence I reached Hampton, with a surplus of
exactly fifty cents with which to begin my education. To me it had been a
long, eventful journey; but the first sight of the large, three-story,
brick school building seemed to have rewarded me for all that I had
undergone in order to reach the place. If the people who gave the money to
provide that building could appreciate the influence the sight of it had
upon me, as well as upon thousands of other youths, they would feel all
the more encouraged to make such gifts. It seemed to me to be the largest
and most beautiful building I had ever seen. The sight of it seemed to
give me new life. I felt that a new kind of existence had now begun—that
life would now have a new meaning. I felt that I had reached the promised
land, and I resolved to let no obstacle prevent me from putting forth the
highest effort to fit myself to accomplish the most good in the world.</p>
<p>As soon as possible after reaching the grounds of the Hampton Institute, I
presented myself before the head teacher for an assignment to a class.
Having been so long without proper food, a bath, and a change of clothing,
I did not, of course, make a very favourable impression upon her, and I
could see at once that there were doubts in her mind about the wisdom of
admitting me as a student. I felt that I could hardly blame her if she got
the idea that I was a worthless loafer or tramp. For some time she did not
refuse to admit me, neither did she decide in my favour, and I continued
to linger about her, and to impress her in all the ways I could with my
worthiness. In the meantime I saw her admitting other students, and that
added greatly to my discomfort, for I felt, deep down in my heart, that I
could do as well as they, if I could only get a chance to show what was in
me.</p>
<p>After some hours had passed, the head teacher said to me: "The adjoining
recitation-room needs sweeping. Take the broom and sweep it."</p>
<p>It occurred to me at once that here was my chance. Never did I receive an
order with more delight. I knew that I could sweep, for Mrs. Ruffner had
thoroughly taught me how to do that when I lived with her.</p>
<p>I swept the recitation-room three times. Then I got a dusting-cloth and
dusted it four times. All the woodwork around the walls, every bench,
table, and desk, I went over four times with my dusting-cloth. Besides,
every piece of furniture had been moved and every closet and corner in the
room had been thoroughly cleaned. I had the feeling that in a large
measure my future depended upon the impression I made upon the teacher in
the cleaning of that room. When I was through, I reported to the head
teacher. She was a "Yankee" woman who knew just where to look for dirt.
She went into the room and inspected the floor and closets; then she took
her handkerchief and rubbed it on the woodwork about the walls, and over
the table and benches. When she was unable to find one bit of dirt on the
floor, or a particle of dust on any of the furniture, she quietly
remarked, "I guess you will do to enter this institution."</p>
<p>I was one of the happiest souls on Earth. The sweeping of that room was my
college examination, and never did any youth pass an examination for
entrance into Harvard or Yale that gave him more genuine satisfaction. I
have passed several examinations since then, but I have always felt that
this was the best one I ever passed.</p>
<p>I have spoken of my own experience in entering the Hampton Institute.
Perhaps few, if any, had anything like the same experience that I had, but
about the same period there were hundreds who found their way to Hampton
and other institutions after experiencing something of the same
difficulties that I went through. The young men and women were determined
to secure an education at any cost.</p>
<p>The sweeping of the recitation-room in the manner that I did it seems to
have paved the way for me to get through Hampton. Miss Mary F. Mackie, the
head teacher, offered me a position as janitor. This, of course, I gladly
accepted, because it was a place where I could work out nearly all the
cost of my board. The work was hard and taxing but I stuck to it. I had a
large number of rooms to care for, and had to work late into the night,
while at the same time I had to rise by four o'clock in the morning, in
order to build the fires and have a little time in which to prepare my
lessons. In all my career at Hampton, and ever since I have been out in
the world, Miss Mary F. Mackie, the head teacher to whom I have referred,
proved one of my strongest and most helpful friends. Her advice and
encouragement were always helpful in strengthening to me in the darkest
hour.</p>
<p>I have spoken of the impression that was made upon me by the buildings and
general appearance of the Hampton Institute, but I have not spoken of that
which made the greatest and most lasting impression on me, and that was a
great man—the noblest, rarest human being that it has ever been my
privilege to meet. I refer to the late General Samuel C. Armstrong.</p>
<p>It has been my fortune to meet personally many of what are called great
characters, both in Europe and America, but I do not hesitate to say that
I never met any man who, in my estimation, was the equal of General
Armstrong. Fresh from the degrading influences of the slave plantation and
the coal-mines, it was a rare privilege for me to be permitted to come
into direct contact with such a character as General Armstrong. I shall
always remember that the first time I went into his presence he made the
impression upon me of being a perfect man: I was made to feel that there
was something about him that was superhuman. It was my privilege to know
the General personally from the time I entered Hampton till he died, and
the more I saw of him the greater he grew in my estimation. 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. 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.
Instead of studying books so constantly, how I wish that our schools and
colleges might learn to study men and things!</p>
<p>General Armstrong spent two of the last six months of his life in my home
at Tuskegee. At that time he was paralyzed to the extent that he had lost
control of his body and voice in a very large degree. Notwithstanding his
affliction, he worked almost constantly night and day for the cause to
which he had given his life. I never saw a man who so completely lost
sight of himself. I do not believe he ever had a selfish thought. He was
just as happy in trying to assist some other institution in the South as
he was when working for Hampton. Although he fought the Southern white man
in the Civil War, I never heard him utter a bitter word against him
afterward. On the other hand, he was constantly seeking to find ways by
which he could be of service to the Southern whites.</p>
<p>It would be difficult to describe the hold that he had upon the students
at Hampton, or the faith they had in him. In fact, he was worshipped by
his students. It never occurred to me that General Armstrong could fail in
anything that he undertook. There is almost no request that he could have
made that would not have been complied with. When he was a guest at my
home in Alabama, and was so badly paralyzed that he had to be wheeled
about in an invalid's chair, I recall that one of the General's former
students had occasion to push his chair up a long, steep hill that taxed
his strength to the utmost. When the top of the hill was reached, the
former pupil, with a glow of happiness on his face, exclaimed, "I am so
glad that I have been permitted to do something that was real hard for the
General before he dies!" While I was a student at Hampton, the dormitories
became so crowded that it was impossible to find room for all who wanted
to be admitted. In order to help remedy the difficulty, the General
conceived the plan of putting up tents to be used as rooms. As soon as it
became known that General Armstrong would be pleased if some of the older
students would live in the tents during the winter, nearly every student
in school volunteered to go.</p>
<p>I was one of the volunteers. The winter that we spent in those tents was
an intensely cold one, and we suffered severely—how much I am sure
General Armstrong never knew, because we made no complaints. 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. More than once, during a cold night, when a stiff gale would be
blowing, our tent was lifted bodily, and we would find ourselves in the
open air. The General would usually pay a visit to the tents early in the
morning, and his earnest, cheerful, encouraging voice would dispel any
feeling of despondency.</p>
<p>I have spoken of my admiration for General Armstrong, and yet he was but a
type of that Christlike body of men and women who went into the Negro
schools at the close of the war by the hundreds to assist in lifting up my
race. The history of the world fails to show a higher, purer, and more
unselfish class of men and women than those who found their way into those
Negro schools.</p>
<p>Life at Hampton was a constant revelation to me; was constantly taking me
into a new world. The matter of having meals at regular hours, of eating
on a tablecloth, using a napkin, the use of the bath-tub and of the
tooth-brush, as well as the use of sheets upon the bed, were all new to
me.</p>
<p>I sometimes feel that almost the most valuable lesson I got at the Hampton
Institute was in the use and value of the bath. I learned there for the
first time some of its value, not only in keeping the body healthy, but in
inspiring self-respect and promoting virtue. In all my travels in the
South and elsewhere since leaving Hampton I have always in some way sought
my daily bath. To get it sometimes when I have been the guest of my own
people in a single-roomed cabin has not always been easy to do, except by
slipping away to some stream in the woods. I have always tried to teach my
people that some provision for bathing should be a part of every house.</p>
<p>For some time, while a student at Hampton, I possessed but a single pair
of socks, but when I had worn these till they became soiled, I would wash
them at night and hang them by the fire to dry, so that I might wear them
again the next morning.</p>
<p>The charge for my board at Hampton was ten dollars per month. I was
expected to pay a part of this in cash and to work out the remainder. To
meet this cash payment, as I have stated, I had just fifty cents when I
reached the institution. Aside from a very few dollars that my brother
John was able to send me once in a while, I had no money with which to pay
my board. I was determined from the first to make my work as janitor so
valuable that my services would be indispensable. This I succeeded in
doing to such an extent that I was soon informed that I would be allowed
the full cost of my board in return for my work. The cost of tuition was
seventy dollars a year. This, of course, was wholly beyond my ability to
provide. 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. General Armstrong, however, very kindly got Mr.
S. Griffitts Morgan, of New Bedford, Mass., to defray the cost of my
tuition during the whole time that I was at Hampton. After I finished the
course at Hampton and had entered upon my lifework at Tuskegee, I had the
pleasure of visiting Mr. Morgan several times.</p>
<p>After having been for a while at Hampton, I found myself in difficulty
because I did not have books and clothing. Usually, however, I got around
the trouble about books by borrowing from those who were more fortunate
than myself. As to clothes, when I reached Hampton I had practically
nothing. Everything that I possessed was in a small hand satchel. My
anxiety about clothing was increased because of the fact that General
Armstrong made a personal inspection of the young men in ranks, to see
that their clothes were clean. Shoes had to be polished, there must be no
buttons off the clothing, and no grease-spots. To wear one suit of clothes
continually, while at work and in the schoolroom, and at the same time
keep it clean, was rather a hard problem for me to solve. In some way I
managed to get on till the teachers learned that I was in earnest and
meant to succeed, and then some of them were kind enough to see that I was
partly supplied with second-hand clothing that had been sent in barrels
from the North. These barrels proved a blessing to hundreds of poor but
deserving students. Without them I question whether I should ever have
gotten through Hampton.</p>
<p>When I first went to Hampton I do not recall that I had ever slept in a
bed that had two sheets on it. In those days there were not many buildings
there, and room was very precious. There were seven other boys in the same
room with me; most of them, however, students who had been there for some
time. The sheets were quite a puzzle to me. The first night I slept under
both of them, and the second night I slept on top of them; but by watching
the other boys I learned my lesson in this, and have been trying to follow
it ever since and to teach it to others.</p>
<p>I was among the youngest of the students who were in Hampton at the time.
Most of the students were men and women—some as old as forty years
of age. As I now recall the scene of my first year, I do not believe that
one often has the opportunity of coming into contact with three or four
hundred men and women who were so tremendously in earnest as these men and
women were. Every hour was occupied in study or work. Nearly all had had
enough actual contact with the world to teach them the need of education.
Many of the older ones were, of course, too old to master the text-books
very thoroughly, and it was often sad to watch their struggles; but they
made up in earnest much of what they lacked in books. Many of them were as
poor as I was, and, besides having to wrestle with their books, they had
to struggle with a poverty which prevented their having the necessities of
life. Many of them had aged parents who were dependent upon them, and some
of them were men who had wives whose support in some way they had to
provide for.</p>
<p>The great and prevailing idea that seemed to take possession of every one
was to prepare himself to lift up the people at his home. No one seemed to
think of himself. And the officers and teachers, what a rare set of human
beings they were! They worked for the students night and day, in seasons
and out of season. They seemed happy only when they were helping the
students in some manner. Whenever it is written—and I hope it will
be—the part that the Yankee teachers played in the education of the
Negroes immediately after the war will make one of the most thrilling
parts of the history off this country. The time is not far distant when
the whole South will appreciate this service in a way that it has not yet
been able to do.</p>
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