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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64819 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64819)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Service by the Educated Negro, by Roscoe
-Conkling Bruce
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Service by the Educated Negro
- Address of Roscoe Conkling Bruce of Tuskegee Institute at the
- Commencement Exercises of the M Street High School Metropolitan A.
- M. E. Church Washington, D.C., June 16, 1903
-
-Author: Roscoe Conkling Bruce
-
-Release Date: March 14, 2021 [eBook #64819]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Charlene Taylor, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SERVICE BY THE EDUCATED NEGRO ***
-
-
-
-
- SERVICE BY THE EDUCATED NEGRO
-
- ADDRESS OF ROSCOE CONKLING BRUCE
- OF TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE AT THE COMMENCEMENT
- EXERCISES OF THE M STREET
- HIGH SCHOOL METROPOLITAN A. M. E.
- CHURCH WASHINGTON, D. C., JUNE 16, 1903
-
-
-
-
- Copyright 1903
- C. W. B. Bruce
-
- Tuskegee Institute Steam Print.
-
-
-
-
-SERVICE BY THE EDUCATED NEGRO.
-
-
-When George William Curtis had received from Harvard her greatest
-degree, he arose at the Alumni Dinner and said, “In the old Italian
-story the nobleman turns out of the hot street crowded with eager
-faces into the coolness and silence of his palace. As he looks at the
-pictures of the long line of ancestors he hears a voice,--or is it
-his own heart beating?--which says to him _noblesse oblige_. The
-youngest scion of the oldest house is pledged by all the virtues and
-honor of his ancestry to a life not unworthy his lineage.... When I
-came here I was not a nobleman, but to-day I have been ennobled. The
-youngest doctor of the oldest school, I too, say with the Italian,
-_noblesse oblige_. I am pledged by all the honorable traditions of
-the noble family into which I am this day adopted.”... You, my friends,
-are ennobled by the diploma of a school, rich in traditions of high
-endeavor and actual service. Shall those traditions fail to enter your
-hearts, and to quicken your energies, and to chasten your ambitions?
-This question you are not now competent to answer, and you will not be
-competent until you have lived your lives.
-
-Your equipment for the business of life is not contemptible. As
-workers you have some acquaintance with the natural resources of
-our country, and the ways in which they have been utilized in the
-production and distribution of commodities through the perfecting of
-industrial organization and the applying of science to work. More,
-importantly, you possess in varying degrees a group of valuable
-industrial qualities,--that ambition without which work is drudgery
-and enlargement of life unsought and unattainable; that habit of
-earnest endeavor which, established by continuous attention to Greek
-or Latin, mathematics or history, may be utilized in the school room,
-or on the farm, or in the court room; that habit of self-control
-which enables men to sacrifice vagrant impulse to sober duty; that
-resourcefulness which discovers better methods of getting work done;
-that directing intelligence by which one man can effectively organize
-for a given purpose, many materials and many workers. In addition to
-the knowledge and the qualities I have mentioned, most of you have a
-settled disposition toward some form of self-support appropriate to an
-exceptional training; while you know that some men must black other
-men’s boots, you also know that a boot-black with a high school diploma
-at home means waste--waste of time, waste of money, waste of education.
-Moreover, you appreciate the duties and value the privileges of
-citizenship in a democracy, and most of you have on the whole a serious
-intent to do what you reasonably can to promote the general welfare.
-Such is your equipment as citizens. Finally, as human beings, you are
-able to participate in the intellectual, æsthetic, and moral interests
-of cultivated people. How may you with such equipment be really useful
-under the conditions of American life? That is our problem.
-
-And right here let me say that nobody wishes you to make a profession
-of uplifting your race. In the first place, that’s a pretty big job;
-and in the second place, your race is uplifted whenever one of you
-manages well a truck farm, a grocery store, a school room, or a bank.
-Charity begins at home; your chief business should be to uplift each
-himself. My present purpose, however, is to consider mainly how such
-individual success may contribute to the welfare of the many.
-
-Let us consider, first of all, how you may be of direct service by work
-in which the chief factor is personal influence and by work in which
-the chief factor is directing intelligence.
-
-Teaching is an art inseparable from the personality of the teacher,--an
-art in which a mature person seeks by personal influence to help
-immature persons build their characters soundly. Teaching ability,
-to adapt the words of Cardinal Newman, “is not a mere extrinsic or
-accidental advantage which is ours to-day and another’s to-morrow,
-which may be got up from a book and easily forgotten again, which we
-can command or communicate at our pleasure, which we can borrow for
-the occasion, carry about in our hands and take into the market; it is
-an acquired illumination, it is a habit, a personal possession and an
-inward endowment.” The best way to become a good teacher is, therefore,
-to become a good man or a good woman, and to grow in power to interest
-and influence young people. Such personality and power cannot be
-manufactured to order, but are slowly developed by much reading and
-thinking and doing and no little contact with wholesome people. In
-Charles Francis Adams’ pungent address, at Cambridge in 1883, he said,
-“In these days of repeating rifles, my alma mater sent me and my
-classmates out into the strife equipped with shields and swords and
-javelins. We were to grapple with living questions through the medium
-of the dead languages.” While thus sharply criticizing the content
-of the curriculum, Mr. Adams would have been the first to maintain
-that to breathe the atmosphere of a university is an assured way of
-getting broadened culture, and that this atmosphere is made largely
-by the teachers. Frederick Douglass had no university degree, but he
-was certainly a man of culture; his teachers were among the choicest
-spirits of an aroused generation--Sumner and Garrison and Wendell
-Phillips--and they gave him breadth and balance and clear-sightedness.
-Charles Francis Adams was set upon the highway of modern culture
-despite the curriculum; Douglass received that grace which is of the
-spirit of literature without the curriculum. Both men were deeply
-indebted to noble teachers. The thing that makes one man really
-different from another is not so much knowledge as character; and the
-thing that makes one school different from another is not so much
-curriculum and apparatus, as teaching body. Algebra and trigonometry,
-Greek and Latin, history and political economy, the student will
-forget; but he will not forget a teacher gentle but earnest, of
-disinterested scholarship and life-long devotion. The specific teaching
-may be quite erased from the memory, but in the heart will be left a
-deepening respect for the teacher.
-
-Many of you are to become class-room teachers. Remember that teaching
-ability is an inward endowment; remember that a morally stunted man
-or a ribbon-loving woman cannot be an effective teacher. The most
-searching critic of character I ever knew was a barefoot boy whose
-laughing eyes danced over the pages of the fourth reader; an intuitive
-philosopher he! School boy opinion has, I doubt not, many vagaries
-but on the whole its essential decisions as to teachers are amazingly
-correct. Whether you teach geography by the Oswego Method, is not
-greatly to the point; whether you have won the confidence of your
-class--that is the main issue; and that conquest is not made by the
-sword of discipline but by the spirit of vigorous goodness.
-
-Moreover the genuine teacher knows that his duty is not bounded by the
-four walls of the class-room. He is dealing with boys and girls to be
-sure, but he is dealing with more--with social conditions. The life and
-work of the community he must study quite as much as he must study the
-child. Indeed, child and man are largely products of social conditions.
-The educated teacher, by friendly visits to homes and by cheerful work
-in churches and societies, will seek to elevate community opinion and
-the standard of life and work. A crowded unclean home in an undrained
-street, is almost as much an object of concern to the educated teacher
-as is a hopeless little dunce who can’t spell “rabbit!” Let us ground
-child-study in community study.
-
-This knowledge of the life and work of the community will react upon
-the program of study. The educated teacher, I have said, aims at
-raising somewhat the level of life in the community. The program of
-study is an instrument for that end. A school unresponsive to the needs
-of actual life is a school preparing for Utopia. The universities and
-the public schools of the Western States illustrate what I mean: for
-example, the University of California has recently introduced a course
-in irrigation. And here in the East, Cornell teaches poultry raising.
-For an unscrubbed population the school should emphasize cleanliness;
-for a propertyless population, foresight and thrift. Let me speak
-even more definitely. In this city of Washington, as in other urban
-communities, the death rate of the Negro population is exceedingly
-high. This excessive death rate is due to a variety of causes;
-relatively low economic position is a powerful cause. Thus, one of the
-largest industrial insurance companies in the United States finds, I
-learn, that the death rate of Negroes is practically the same as that
-of whites, in approximately the same industrial occupations; and there
-is much more evidence to the same effect. In addition to the teaching
-of hygiene, the school may aim to remedy the conditions expressed in
-the high death rate, in two ways,--first, through imparting productive
-capacity by the training of hands; and second, through developing wants
-by the touching of hearts and arousing of minds.
-
-Already you have a manual training high school and through the grades
-certain work in carpentry and sewing and cooking. The increasing
-efficiency of all such work should be welcomed and actively aided by
-every educated teacher. After a while, let us hope, the schools here
-will offer from one end to the other, such teaching of the industrial
-arts as will prepare students worthily to maintain themselves under
-severe economic stress. Do you realize that, despite the enlargement
-of educational opportunities in Washington and the growth of the Negro
-population, there are probably here to-day fewer Negro artisans than
-there were in 1870? Here is a profound need, and for the schools a rare
-opportunity. Moreover, the school life of most children is short, not
-over five or six years. If the school possessed adequate facilities for
-giving industrial capacity, more parents would be willing and able to
-let their children remain in school seven and eight and nine years. The
-schools and the cultivated portion of this community cannot afford to
-give those who ask for bread a stone. We must send the whole boy to
-school and not merely his head!
-
-Not for a moment do I decry that important function of the schools,
-which I have called the development of wants. Human wants are social
-forces. Corn and cotton are grown to supply certain bodily wants;
-the fine arts are cultivated in response to certain æsthetic wants;
-philosophy and pure science are elaborated at the quiet insistence of
-certain intellectual wants; religion is preached to assuage certain
-spiritual wants. Every voluntary act is the hand-maid of some want.
-Now, it is the fundamental business of the schools to enlarge the range
-of the students’ interests and wants, to stir up a divine discontent.
-The saddest thing about the Negro peasant in his windowless cabin in
-Georgia, the saddest thing about the Negroes in the filthy shanties of
-Mobile, New York, and Washington, is not so much poverty, as slovenly
-unconcern. What all such people need--be they white or black, red or
-yellow--is the development of wants--wants for better things. A man of
-moderately developed wants will exert himself to get a steady job under
-healthful conditions, to get a comfortable house to live in--three or
-four sunny, pleasantly furnished rooms and, if possible a garden for
-vegetables and flowers--yes, he will exert himself to win a wife to
-make that house a home. Such wants (and they are, you will note, not
-impossibly spiritual) every school ought to tend to develop.
-
-In short, the development of the wants of sober men and the giving of
-the skill to buy the means of satisfying those wants--these two things
-are vital to the work of the school. Let me be clearly understood; the
-school should of course develop the more spiritual wants, wants for the
-things that give literature and art and religion their values. These
-spiritual things are the headwaters of the fullest and deepest and
-highest enjoyments of life. But these matters have long been emphasized
-in the traditions of school-men; moreover, when the flesh is weak, the
-spirit is not very strong. My wish just now is to emphasize the things
-that lie at the basis of race maintenance and progress.
-
-The considerations brought forward exhibit the opportunities of the
-teacher and the high significance of the teacher’s work.
-
-Teaching and preaching are very much alike. Phillips Brooks said very
-truly that preaching is the bringing of truth through personality. Some
-of you will prepare yourselves to preach; all of you will have to do
-with preachers. There is no lack of preachers but there is much lack
-of good preachers. The preacher has the entree to the firesides of the
-people. The educated preacher, like the educated teacher, realizes the
-profound effect that the housing of the working classes exerts upon the
-morals and the efficiency and the happiness of the working classes,
-the profound effect that surroundings exert upon life and character.
-The preacher will use some of the influence that issues from his
-superrational functions to make the homes of the people hygienically
-as well as morally clean, to make those homes more attractive than the
-resorts of vice.
-
-Religion and the Church have, from a certain point of view, two main
-functions,--first to make peace between human society and assumed
-spiritual beings; and, second, to antagonize anti-social acts and
-tendencies. The first function, religion performs for a horde of
-man-eating savages as well as for the congregation of St. Paul’s; the
-second function religion performs, characteristically in a civilized
-society, by allying itself with morality. The surprisingly low death
-rate of Jews wherever found is unquestionably due in large part to this
-alliance of religion and morality. In our English Bible we find:--
-
-“And God spake all these words, saying,
-
-“Honour thy father and thy mother....
-
-“Thou shalt not kill.
-
-“Thou shalt not commit adultery.
-
-“Thou shalt not steal.
-
-“Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.
-
-“Though shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house, thou shalt not covet thy
-neighbour’s wife, ... nor anything that is thy neighbour’s.
-
-“And all the people saw the thunderings, and the lightnings, and the
-noise of the trumpet, and the mountain smoking.”...
-
-Now, the practical usefulness of the preacher lies largely in the fact
-that he supplies the sanctions for right doing,--the thunderings and
-the lightnings and the noise of the trumpet, the mountain smoking,
-and in all but above all Jehovah. To show the man in the street or in
-the cotton field that for him lying and stealing are bad because, if
-everybody were a liar and a thief, society would fall to pieces,--that
-would be very well, but it would hardly make the man honest in word
-and deed. If, however, you marshal feelings of awe and reverence in
-defence of honesty, if you get God on your side, your success is more
-assured and you may develop a “sensibility to principle which feels a
-stain like a wound.” The preacher fortifies the common moralities with
-these religious sanctions and that is no easy business. The preacher
-must himself be righteous, resourceful, sympathetic, with the gift of
-nearness to men. Such qualities education is peculiarly fit to bestow
-or to develop, and hence an educated ministry is sorely needed by our
-people from Boston to New Orleans.
-
-An educated ministry would realize that social settlements, gymnasiums,
-kindergartens, day nurseries, friendly visiting, homes for defectives
-and orphans and the aged may fitly and usefully be organized and
-maintained by the church. By such means the church may tend to
-establish a kingdom of heaven on earth.
-
-Among cultivated Negroes there is apparent an unfortunate tendency to
-look at preachers askance. This is due largely to reaction against bad
-preachers, and to failure to understand and appreciate the temporal
-opportunities of the Church. I argue for the usefulness of good
-preachers and of the “institutional” church. Though no member of this
-graduating class should become a preacher or a preacher’s wife, every
-member may wisely ally himself with the church and use his personal
-influence to enlarge and strengthen church work, to make it definite
-and human and nobly practical.
-
-So much for the work in which personal influence is the determining
-factor. Medicine and business are types of the work in which what I
-have rudely called directing intelligence determines.
-
-In the profession of medicine, I admit, personal influence and
-directing intelligence subtly interlace. The Negro doctor’s social
-position makes him specially accessible to Negroes in cases of need. As
-a friend of the family or of the family’s friends, the doctor is not
-dreaded as a feelingless stranger with a terrible knife. Moreover,
-the Negro doctor does not feel himself a man of alien blood come to
-tend an inferior. Social position and understanding sympathy, then,
-render the Negro doctor readily accessible and very useful. Moreover,
-the Negro’s physical condition offers the doctor large opportunities
-for noble service. In a book upon “Ethnic Factors in the Population
-of Boston,” Doctor Bushee says, “In Boston the mortality of the Negro
-is much larger than that of any other ethnic factor”; again, “A high
-death rate, instead of a low birthrate is causing the Negroes to
-disappear”; and the statistics are not much more encouraging in many
-other urban communities North and South. That relatively low economic
-position is a powerful factor in producing this alarming death rate, I
-have already suggested; another capital factor is pitiable ignorance
-of the rudiments of personal hygiene and of sanitation. Negro doctors
-may without much trouble diffuse throughout a community these rudiments
-of knowledge and in so doing will prove themselves public servants.
-North and South the conspicuous financial success and substantial
-social service of hundreds of Negro doctors eloquently establish the
-correctness of this view; and of practising physicians, the Negro
-people to-day have unmistakably too few.
-
-What of the Negro business man? In Washington public employment and
-the professions have captured most of the energetic and alert Negroes,
-to the injury of business development. Springfield, Massachusetts;
-Richmond, Virginia; Dayton, Ohio,--not one of these important cities
-has a total population as large as the Negro population of the District
-of Columbia. As buyers of goods, eighty-seven thousand people are
-important; but as sellers of goods, the eighty-seven thousand Negroes
-in Washington are by no means important. For example, of the total
-profits on the dry goods bought in a year by the Negro population of
-Washington,--profits amounting to thousands and thousands of dollars,
-for the ratio of expenditure to income is exceptionally large,--what
-per cent. goes to Negro merchants? Shall I say five per cent., one
-per cent., or one thousandth of one per cent.? Mathematical precision
-is, of course, not possible but you and I know that practically none
-of these profits go to Negro merchants. And you and I could name a
-dozen white merchants who have been enriched by those profits. And
-in consideration of this fact how many Negro clerks have the white
-merchants placed in their stores? how many Negro floor walkers? how
-many Negro buyers? And, my friends, how many thousands of years must
-elapse before the Washington Negro will add to his culture enough
-co-operative endeavor and competitive power to change all this? I
-myself have never yet been convinced that the Anglo-Saxon and the
-Jew really need the black man’s charity. Though I cannot point out,
-then, to the members of this graduating class openings in established
-business houses, I can point out that their success in business will
-provide opportunities for some later class, and will help to make the
-spending of Negroes enrich Negroes. Let me suggest two other ways in
-which the Negro business men may be of great service to the many. In
-the first place, the rents charged Negroes in cities, for example,
-Washington, are considerably higher for the same accommodations than
-the rents charged white people. By offering good houses at reasonable
-rents to the Negro working class, the Negro business man will find a
-paying investment and a means of much service. In the second place,
-hotels, restaurants, and theatres even in the capital of the nation are
-open to black men and women only on degrading terms, or not open at
-all. The closing of such accommodations is really the opening for black
-business men of the doors of opportunity.
-
-In discussing ways of direct service I have then mentioned teaching and
-preaching as types of the work in which the decisive factor is personal
-influence. Medicine and business I have mentioned as types of the work
-in which the decisive factor is directing intelligence.
-
-And now I wish to discuss two ways in which educated Negroes may be
-of indirect service,--first, by offering their fellows copies for
-imitation, and, second, by establishing the dignity of the race.
-In 1881, hardly a white man or a black man in the country dreamed
-that in twenty-two years a Negro would have achieved the building
-of a beautiful city in a Southern wilderness, would have organized
-efficiently the business of that industrial community of some 1700
-people, would have won the abiding confidence of white men and black
-men North and South, would have brought the white North and the white
-South into intelligent co-operation in the uplifting of black men,
-would have worked out a solution for the central problem in American
-education, would have been acknowledged master of arts by the oldest
-university in the land, would have written one of the impressive books
-of the century, would have been asked by the British Government for
-help in the reconstruction of South Africa, would have been called by
-the sanest of British critics of affairs the most notable figure in
-the American Republic! And yet, this miracle you and I see to-day with
-our own eyes. The example of this man is being imitated in a hundred
-educational and industrial communities in the Southern States. And all
-men feel more respect for the Negro race because out of its loins has
-come Booker T. Washington.
-
-A constructive statesman like Washington, educators like Lewis Moore
-and Lucy Moten and your own Anna Cooper, theologians like Bowen and
-Grimke, scholars like Blyden and Scarborough and DuBois and Kelly
-Miller, inventors like Woods and McCoy, a novelist like Chesnutt, a
-poet like Dunbar, a musician like Coleridge-Taylor, a painter like
-Tanner--yes, and, of those who are gone, Banneker who searched the
-heavens; Toussaint, soldier and statesman; Aldridge, the tragedian with
-his first medal in arts and sciences from the King of Prussia; Pushkin,
-the poet of the Russias; Dumas, father and son; the saintly Crummel;
-and Douglass the argument for freedom,--I say, the indirect service of
-such people is incalculable.
-
-Now, for you and me no such careers are probable and yet every educated
-Negro who is worth his salt, is in similar fashion a copy for imitation
-and serves to secure respect for his race. The Negro contractor and
-builder; the Negro who owns a well managed truck farm; the Negro school
-teacher, who has saved money enough to buy municipal bonds or shares in
-a railway,--that person becomes in a money getting time a definite and
-concrete argument to white men and to black men that black men can be
-more than hewers of wood and drawers of water, than cooks and coachmen.
-Fundamentally, you and I by our thoughtfulness, our practical interest
-in the happiness of others, our elevation above petty prejudice, our
-simplicity, our decisive prudence, our enduring energy, our devotion,
-may indirectly count for good in a thousand ways in the life and work
-of our communities.
-
-And, now, my friends, you enter the circle of educated men and women.
-Your personal influence will be felt in school room and in pulpit. Your
-directing intelligence will count in law, and medicine, and business;
-as able and devoted men and women, you by your examples will steady
-the nerves of a staggering people and make the word Negro more than a
-reproach. Delicate indecision, hesitant virtue, carping discontent,
-bric-a-brac culture--these ill become stalwart men and robust women.
-By all the honorable traditions of the noble family into which you are
-now adopted, you are pledged not to pick your way daintily in the soft
-places of the earth; you are pledged to make your lives real, useful,
-constructive. Remember--_noblesse oblige_!
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Spaced out text is surrounded by underscores: _gesperrt_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SERVICE BY THE EDUCATED NEGRO ***
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Service by the Educated Negro, by Roscoe Conkling Bruce</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>Service by the Educated Negro</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>Address of Roscoe Conkling Bruce of Tuskegee Institute at the Commencement Exercises of the M Street High School Metropolitan A. M. E. Church Washington, D.C., June 16, 1903</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Roscoe Conkling Bruce</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 14, 2021 [eBook #64819]</div>
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-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SERVICE BY THE EDUCATED NEGRO ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/titlepage.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>SERVICE BY THE EDUCATED NEGRO</h1>
-
-<p class="ph1">ADDRESS OF ROSCOE CONKLING BRUCE<br />
-OF TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE AT THE COMMENCEMENT<br />
-EXERCISES OF THE M STREET<br />
-HIGH SCHOOL METROPOLITAN A. M. E.<br />
-CHURCH WASHINGTON, D. C., JUNE 16, 1903</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-
-<p class="center">
-Copyright 1903<br />
-C. W. B. Bruce<br />
-<br />
-Tuskegee Institute Steam Print.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">SERVICE BY THE EDUCATED NEGRO.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When George William Curtis had received from Harvard
-her greatest degree, he arose at the Alumni Dinner
-and said, &#8220;In the old Italian story the nobleman turns out
-of the hot street crowded with eager faces into the coolness
-and silence of his palace. As he looks at the pictures
-of the long line of ancestors he hears a voice,&mdash;or is it his
-own heart beating?&mdash;which says to him <span class="gesperrt">noblesse oblige</span>.
-The youngest scion of the oldest house is pledged by all
-the virtues and honor of his ancestry to a life not unworthy
-his lineage.... When I came here I was not a nobleman,
-but to-day I have been ennobled. The youngest doctor of
-the oldest school, I too, say with the Italian, <span class="gesperrt">noblesse
-oblige</span>. I am pledged by all the honorable traditions of
-the noble family into which I am this day adopted.&#8221;... You,
-my friends, are ennobled by the diploma of a school, rich
-in traditions of high endeavor and actual service. Shall
-those traditions fail to enter your hearts, and to quicken
-your energies, and to chasten your ambitions? This question
-you are not now competent to answer, and you will not
-be competent until you have lived your lives.</p>
-
-<p>Your equipment for the business of life is not contemptible.
-As workers you have some acquaintance with the natural
-resources of our country, and the ways in which they
-have been utilized in the production and distribution of
-commodities through the perfecting of industrial organization
-and the applying of science to work. More, importantly,
-you possess in varying degrees a group of valuable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-industrial qualities,&mdash;that ambition without which work is
-drudgery and enlargement of life unsought and unattainable;
-that habit of earnest endeavor which, established by
-continuous attention to Greek or Latin, mathematics or history,
-may be utilized in the school room, or on the farm, or
-in the court room; that habit of self-control which enables
-men to sacrifice vagrant impulse to sober duty; that resourcefulness
-which discovers better methods of getting work
-done; that directing intelligence by which one man can
-effectively organize for a given purpose, many materials and
-many workers. In addition to the knowledge and the qualities
-I have mentioned, most of you have a settled disposition
-toward some form of self-support appropriate to an exceptional
-training; while you know that some men must black
-other men&#8217;s boots, you also know that a boot-black with a
-high school diploma at home means waste&mdash;waste of time,
-waste of money, waste of education. Moreover, you appreciate
-the duties and value the privileges of citizenship in
-a democracy, and most of you have on the whole a serious
-intent to do what you reasonably can to promote the general
-welfare. Such is your equipment as citizens. Finally,
-as human beings, you are able to participate in the intellectual,
-&aelig;sthetic, and moral interests of cultivated people.
-How may you with such equipment be really useful under
-the conditions of American life? That is our problem.</p>
-
-<p>And right here let me say that nobody wishes you to
-make a profession of uplifting your race. In the first
-place, that&#8217;s a pretty big job; and in the second
-place, your race is uplifted whenever one of you manages
-well a truck farm, a grocery store, a school room, or a
-bank. Charity begins at home; your chief business should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-be to uplift each himself. My present purpose, however,
-is to consider mainly how such individual success may contribute
-to the welfare of the many.</p>
-
-<p>Let us consider, first of all, how you may be of direct
-service by work in which the chief factor is personal influence
-and by work in which the chief factor is directing intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>Teaching is an art inseparable from the personality of
-the teacher,&mdash;an art in which a mature person seeks by personal
-influence to help immature persons build their
-characters soundly. Teaching ability, to adapt the words
-of Cardinal Newman, &#8220;is not a mere extrinsic or accidental
-advantage which is ours to-day and another&#8217;s to-morrow,
-which may be got up from a book and easily forgotten
-again, which we can command or communicate at our pleasure,
-which we can borrow for the occasion, carry about in
-our hands and take into the market; it is an acquired illumination,
-it is a habit, a personal possession and an inward
-endowment.&#8221; The best way to become a good teacher is,
-therefore, to become a good man or a good woman, and to
-grow in power to interest and influence young people. Such
-personality and power cannot be manufactured to order,
-but are slowly developed by much reading and thinking and
-doing and no little contact with wholesome people. In
-Charles Francis Adams&#8217; pungent address, at Cambridge in
-1883, he said, &#8220;In these days of repeating rifles, my alma
-mater sent me and my classmates out into the strife
-equipped with shields and swords and javelins. We were
-to grapple with living questions through the medium
-of the dead languages.&#8221; While thus sharply criticizing the
-content of the curriculum, Mr. Adams would have been the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-first to maintain that to breathe the atmosphere of a university
-is an assured way of getting broadened culture, and that
-this atmosphere is made largely by the teachers. Frederick
-Douglass had no university degree, but he was certainly a
-man of culture; his teachers were among the choicest
-spirits of an aroused generation&mdash;Sumner and Garrison and
-Wendell Phillips&mdash;and they gave him breadth and balance
-and clear-sightedness. Charles Francis Adams was set upon
-the highway of modern culture despite the curriculum;
-Douglass received that grace which is of the spirit of
-literature without the curriculum. Both men were deeply indebted
-to noble teachers. The thing that makes one man
-really different from another is not so much knowledge as
-character; and the thing that makes one school different
-from another is not so much curriculum and apparatus, as
-teaching body. Algebra and trigonometry, Greek and
-Latin, history and political economy, the student will forget;
-but he will not forget a teacher gentle but earnest, of
-disinterested scholarship and life-long devotion. The specific
-teaching may be quite erased from the memory, but in the
-heart will be left a deepening respect for the teacher.</p>
-
-<p>Many of you are to become class-room teachers. Remember
-that teaching ability is an inward endowment; remember
-that a morally stunted man or a ribbon-loving
-woman cannot be an effective teacher. The most searching
-critic of character I ever knew was a barefoot boy whose
-laughing eyes danced over the pages of the fourth reader;
-an intuitive philosopher he! School boy opinion has, I doubt
-not, many vagaries but on the whole its essential decisions
-as to teachers are amazingly correct. Whether you teach
-geography by the Oswego Method, is not greatly to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-point; whether you have won the confidence of your class&mdash;that
-is the main issue; and that conquest is not made by the
-sword of discipline but by the spirit of vigorous goodness.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover the genuine teacher knows that his duty is
-not bounded by the four walls of the class-room. He is
-dealing with boys and girls to be sure, but he is dealing with
-more&mdash;with social conditions. The life and work of the
-community he must study quite as much as he must study
-the child. Indeed, child and man are largely products of
-social conditions. The educated teacher, by friendly visits
-to homes and by cheerful work in churches and societies,
-will seek to elevate community opinion and the standard of
-life and work. A crowded unclean home in an undrained
-street, is almost as much an object of concern to the educated
-teacher as is a hopeless little dunce who can&#8217;t spell
-&#8220;rabbit!&#8221; Let us ground child-study in community study.</p>
-
-<p>This knowledge of the life and work of the community
-will react upon the program of study. The educated
-teacher, I have said, aims at raising somewhat the level of
-life in the community. The program of study is an instrument
-for that end. A school unresponsive to the needs of
-actual life is a school preparing for Utopia. The universities
-and the public schools of the Western States illustrate
-what I mean: for example, the University of California has
-recently introduced a course in irrigation. And here in the
-East, Cornell teaches poultry raising. For an unscrubbed
-population the school should emphasize cleanliness; for a
-propertyless population, foresight and thrift. Let me
-speak even more definitely. In this city of Washington, as
-in other urban communities, the death rate of the Negro
-population is exceedingly high. This excessive death rate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-is due to a variety of causes; relatively low economic position
-is a powerful cause. Thus, one of the largest industrial
-insurance companies in the United States finds, I learn,
-that the death rate of Negroes is practically the same as
-that of whites, in approximately the same industrial
-occupations; and there is much more evidence to the same
-effect. In addition to the teaching of hygiene, the school
-may aim to remedy the conditions expressed in the high
-death rate, in two ways,&mdash;first, through imparting productive
-capacity by the training of hands; and second, through
-developing wants by the touching of hearts and arousing of
-minds.</p>
-
-<p>Already you have a manual training high school and
-through the grades certain work in carpentry and sewing
-and cooking. The increasing efficiency of all such work
-should be welcomed and actively aided by every educated
-teacher. After a while, let us hope, the schools here will
-offer from one end to the other, such teaching of the industrial
-arts as will prepare students worthily to maintain
-themselves under severe economic stress. Do you realize
-that, despite the enlargement of educational opportunities
-in Washington and the growth of the Negro population,
-there are probably here to-day fewer Negro artisans than
-there were in 1870? Here is a profound need, and for the
-schools a rare opportunity. Moreover, the school life of
-most children is short, not over five or six years. If the
-school possessed adequate facilities for giving industrial capacity,
-more parents would be willing and able to let their
-children remain in school seven and eight and nine years.
-The schools and the cultivated portion of this community
-cannot afford to give those who ask for bread a stone. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-must send the whole boy to school and not merely his head!</p>
-
-<p>Not for a moment do I decry that important function
-of the schools, which I have called the development of
-wants. Human wants are social forces. Corn and cotton
-are grown to supply certain bodily wants; the fine arts are
-cultivated in response to certain &aelig;sthetic wants; philosophy
-and pure science are elaborated at the quiet insistence of
-certain intellectual wants; religion is preached to assuage
-certain spiritual wants. Every voluntary act is the hand-maid
-of some want. Now, it is the fundamental business
-of the schools to enlarge the range of the students&#8217; interests
-and wants, to stir up a divine discontent. The saddest
-thing about the Negro peasant in his windowless cabin in
-Georgia, the saddest thing about the Negroes in the filthy
-shanties of Mobile, New York, and Washington, is not so
-much poverty, as slovenly unconcern. What all such people
-need&mdash;be they white or black, red or yellow&mdash;is the development
-of wants&mdash;wants for better things. A man of
-moderately developed wants will exert himself to get a
-steady job under healthful conditions, to get a comfortable
-house to live in&mdash;three or four sunny, pleasantly furnished
-rooms and, if possible a garden for vegetables and flowers&mdash;yes,
-he will exert himself to win a wife to make that house
-a home. Such wants (and they are, you will note, not impossibly
-spiritual) every school ought to tend to develop.</p>
-
-<p>In short, the development of the wants of sober men
-and the giving of the skill to buy the means of satisfying
-those wants&mdash;these two things are vital to the work of the
-school. Let me be clearly understood; the school should
-of course develop the more spiritual wants, wants for the
-things that give literature and art and religion their values.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-These spiritual things are the headwaters of the fullest and
-deepest and highest enjoyments of life. But these matters
-have long been emphasized in the traditions of school-men;
-moreover, when the flesh is weak, the spirit is not very
-strong. My wish just now is to emphasize the things that
-lie at the basis of race maintenance and progress.</p>
-
-<p>The considerations brought forward exhibit the opportunities
-of the teacher and the high significance of the
-teacher&#8217;s work.</p>
-
-<p>Teaching and preaching are very much alike. Phillips
-Brooks said very truly that preaching is the bringing of truth
-through personality. Some of you will prepare yourselves
-to preach; all of you will have to do with preachers. There
-is no lack of preachers but there is much lack of good
-preachers. The preacher has the entree to the firesides of
-the people. The educated preacher, like the educated
-teacher, realizes the profound effect that the housing of the
-working classes exerts upon the morals and the efficiency
-and the happiness of the working classes, the profound effect
-that surroundings exert upon life and character. The
-preacher will use some of the influence that issues from his
-superrational functions to make the homes of the people
-hygienically as well as morally clean, to make those homes
-more attractive than the resorts of vice.</p>
-
-<p>Religion and the Church have, from a certain point of
-view, two main functions,&mdash;first to make peace between
-human society and assumed spiritual beings; and, second, to
-antagonize anti-social acts and tendencies. The first function,
-religion performs for a horde of man-eating savages as
-well as for the congregation of St. Paul&#8217;s; the second function
-religion performs, characteristically in a civilized society,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-by allying itself with morality. The surprisingly low death
-rate of Jews wherever found is unquestionably due in
-large part to this alliance of religion and morality. In our
-English Bible we find:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And God spake all these words, saying,</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Honour thy father and thy mother....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thou shalt not kill.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thou shalt not commit adultery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thou shalt not steal.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Though shalt not covet thy neighbour&#8217;s house, thou
-shalt not covet thy neighbour&#8217;s wife, ... nor anything that
-is thy neighbour&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And all the people saw the thunderings, and the lightnings,
-and the noise of the trumpet, and the mountain
-smoking.&#8221;...</p>
-
-<p>Now, the practical usefulness of the preacher lies largely
-in the fact that he supplies the sanctions for right doing,&mdash;the
-thunderings and the lightnings and the noise of the
-trumpet, the mountain smoking, and in all but above all
-Jehovah. To show the man in the street or in the cotton
-field that for him lying and stealing are bad because, if everybody
-were a liar and a thief, society would fall to pieces,&mdash;that
-would be very well, but it would hardly make the man
-honest in word and deed. If, however, you marshal feelings
-of awe and reverence in defence of honesty, if you get
-God on your side, your success is more assured and you
-may develop a &#8220;sensibility to principle which feels a stain
-like a wound.&#8221; The preacher fortifies the common moralities
-with these religious sanctions and that is no easy business.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-The preacher must himself be righteous, resourceful,
-sympathetic, with the gift of nearness to men. Such
-qualities education is peculiarly fit to bestow or to develop,
-and hence an educated ministry is sorely needed by our
-people from Boston to New Orleans.</p>
-
-<p>An educated ministry would realize that social settlements,
-gymnasiums, kindergartens, day nurseries, friendly
-visiting, homes for defectives and orphans and the aged
-may fitly and usefully be organized and maintained by the
-church. By such means the church may tend to establish
-a kingdom of heaven on earth.</p>
-
-<p>Among cultivated Negroes there is apparent an unfortunate
-tendency to look at preachers askance. This is due
-largely to reaction against bad preachers, and to failure to
-understand and appreciate the temporal opportunities of
-the Church. I argue for the usefulness of good preachers
-and of the &#8220;institutional&#8221; church. Though no member of
-this graduating class should become a preacher or a preacher&#8217;s
-wife, every member may wisely ally himself with the
-church and use his personal influence to enlarge and
-strengthen church work, to make it definite and human and
-nobly practical.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the work in which personal influence is the
-determining factor. Medicine and business are types of
-the work in which what I have rudely called directing intelligence
-determines.</p>
-
-<p>In the profession of medicine, I admit, personal influence
-and directing intelligence subtly interlace. The Negro
-doctor&#8217;s social position makes him specially accessible
-to Negroes in cases of need. As a friend of the family or
-of the family&#8217;s friends, the doctor is not dreaded as a feelingless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-stranger with a terrible knife. Moreover, the Negro
-doctor does not feel himself a man of alien blood come
-to tend an inferior. Social position and understanding sympathy,
-then, render the Negro doctor readily accessible and
-very useful. Moreover, the Negro&#8217;s physical condition offers
-the doctor large opportunities for noble service. In a
-book upon &#8220;Ethnic Factors in the Population of Boston,&#8221;
-Doctor Bushee says, &#8220;In Boston the mortality of the Negro
-is much larger than that of any other ethnic factor&#8221;;
-again, &#8220;A high death rate, instead of a low birthrate is
-causing the Negroes to disappear&#8221;; and the statistics are not
-much more encouraging in many other urban communities
-North and South. That relatively low economic
-position is a powerful factor in producing this alarming
-death rate, I have already suggested; another capital
-factor is pitiable ignorance of the rudiments of personal hygiene
-and of sanitation. Negro doctors may without much
-trouble diffuse throughout a community these rudiments of
-knowledge and in so doing will prove themselves public
-servants. North and South the conspicuous financial success
-and substantial social service of hundreds of Negro
-doctors eloquently establish the correctness of this view;
-and of practising physicians, the Negro people to-day have
-unmistakably too few.</p>
-
-<p>What of the Negro business man? In Washington public
-employment and the professions have captured most of
-the energetic and alert Negroes, to the injury of business
-development. Springfield, Massachusetts; Richmond, Virginia;
-Dayton, Ohio,&mdash;not one of these important cities has
-a total population as large as the Negro population of the
-District of Columbia. As buyers of goods, eighty-seven<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-thousand people are important; but as sellers of goods, the
-eighty-seven thousand Negroes in Washington are by
-no means important. For example, of the total profits on
-the dry goods bought in a year by the Negro population of
-Washington,&mdash;profits amounting to thousands and thousands
-of dollars, for the ratio of expenditure to income is
-exceptionally large,&mdash;what per cent. goes to Negro merchants?
-Shall I say five per cent., one per cent., or one thousandth
-of one per cent.? Mathematical precision is, of course,
-not possible but you and I know that practically none of
-these profits go to Negro merchants. And you and I could
-name a dozen white merchants who have been enriched by
-those profits. And in consideration of this fact how many
-Negro clerks have the white merchants placed in their stores?
-how many Negro floor walkers? how many Negro buyers?
-And, my friends, how many thousands of years must elapse
-before the Washington Negro will add to his culture
-enough co-operative endeavor and competitive power to
-change all this? I myself have never yet been convinced
-that the Anglo-Saxon and the Jew really need the black
-man&#8217;s charity. Though I cannot point out, then, to the
-members of this graduating class openings in established
-business houses, I can point out that their success in business
-will provide opportunities for some later class, and
-will help to make the spending of Negroes enrich Negroes.
-Let me suggest two other ways in which the Negro business
-men may be of great service to the many. In the first
-place, the rents charged Negroes in cities, for example,
-Washington, are considerably higher for the same accommodations
-than the rents charged white people. By offering
-good houses at reasonable rents to the Negro working<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-class, the Negro business man will find a paying investment
-and a means of much service. In the second place, hotels,
-restaurants, and theatres even in the capital of the nation
-are open to black men and women only on degrading terms,
-or not open at all. The closing of such accommodations is
-really the opening for black business men of the doors of
-opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>In discussing ways of direct service I have then mentioned
-teaching and preaching as types of the work in which
-the decisive factor is personal influence. Medicine and business
-I have mentioned as types of the work in which the
-decisive factor is directing intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>And now I wish to discuss two ways in which educated
-Negroes may be of indirect service,&mdash;first, by offering their
-fellows copies for imitation, and, second, by establishing
-the dignity of the race. In 1881, hardly a white man or a
-black man in the country dreamed that in twenty-two years
-a Negro would have achieved the building of a beautiful
-city in a Southern wilderness, would have organized efficiently
-the business of that industrial community of some
-1700 people, would have won the abiding confidence of
-white men and black men North and South, would have
-brought the white North and the white South into intelligent
-co-operation in the uplifting of black men, would have
-worked out a solution for the central problem in American
-education, would have been acknowledged master of arts
-by the oldest university in the land, would have written one
-of the impressive books of the century, would have been
-asked by the British Government for help in the reconstruction
-of South Africa, would have been called by the sanest
-of British critics of affairs the most notable figure in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-American Republic! And yet, this miracle you and I
-see to-day with our own eyes. The example of this man is
-being imitated in a hundred educational and industrial communities
-in the Southern States. And all men feel more
-respect for the Negro race because out of its loins has come
-Booker T. Washington.</p>
-
-<p>A constructive statesman like Washington, educators
-like Lewis Moore and Lucy Moten and your own Anna
-Cooper, theologians like Bowen and Grimke, scholars like
-Blyden and Scarborough and DuBois and Kelly Miller, inventors
-like Woods and McCoy, a novelist like Chesnutt, a
-poet like Dunbar, a musician like Coleridge-Taylor, a
-painter like Tanner&mdash;yes, and, of those who are gone,
-Banneker who searched the heavens; Toussaint, soldier and
-statesman; Aldridge, the tragedian with his first medal in
-arts and sciences from the King of Prussia; Pushkin, the
-poet of the Russias; Dumas, father and son; the saintly
-Crummel; and Douglass the argument for freedom,&mdash;I
-say, the indirect service of such people is incalculable.</p>
-
-<p>Now, for you and me no such careers are probable and
-yet every educated Negro who is worth his salt, is in similar
-fashion a copy for imitation and serves to secure respect
-for his race. The Negro contractor and builder; the Negro
-who owns a well managed truck farm; the Negro school
-teacher, who has saved money enough to buy municipal
-bonds or shares in a railway,&mdash;that person becomes in a
-money getting time a definite and concrete argument to
-white men and to black men that black men can be more
-than hewers of wood and drawers of water, than cooks and
-coachmen. Fundamentally, you and I by our thoughtfulness,
-our practical interest in the happiness of others, our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-elevation above petty prejudice, our simplicity, our decisive
-prudence, our enduring energy, our devotion, may indirectly
-count for good in a thousand ways in the life and
-work of our communities.</p>
-
-<p>And, now, my friends, you enter the circle of educated
-men and women. Your personal influence will be felt in
-school room and in pulpit. Your directing intelligence will
-count in law, and medicine, and business; as able and devoted
-men and women, you by your examples will steady
-the nerves of a staggering people and make the word Negro
-more than a reproach. Delicate indecision, hesitant
-virtue, carping discontent, bric-a-brac culture&mdash;these ill become
-stalwart men and robust women. By all the honorable
-traditions of the noble family into which you are now
-adopted, you are pledged not to pick your way daintily in
-the soft places of the earth; you are pledged to make your
-lives real, useful, constructive. Remember&mdash;<span class="gesperrt">noblesse
-oblige</span>!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTE:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
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