Coincidently with the report of the resignation of former
Mayor Drennen of Birmingham as a member of the board of trustees of Tuskegee
Institute on account of the Booker Washington-John Wanamaker demonstration at
Saratoga, August 13, Booker Washington wired to Birmingham, August 20th,
his discovery of “misleading and false reports in Southern newspapers”
referring to the occurrence, and saying “I did not escort any female member of
Mr. Wanamaker’s family to or out of the dining-room.” His correction of that
part of the report—which report was published originally in a New York
newspaper August 14th, and thence circulated in the South—and his
accompanying explanation hardly graze the question upon which turned the
criticism of those Southerners who in the past in a mistaken conception of the
situation, were prone to stand by Booker Washington when placed by accident or
by incident in false positions, even at the risk of being themselves
misunderstood. Such Southerners have long since discovered their mistake, and yet
they are not inclined to blame Booker unduly. Their feelings toward him are
rather those of regret at another and signal exhibition of reasons for
hopelessness about the negro in some particulars. Nor do they unduly blame
Wanamaker. They know his exceeding narrow limitation and recognize that as a
partner of Robert C. Ogden he could not fail to be interested in the annual
$12,000 Wanamaker advertising Ogden train, and to be misled by the reception
given to that train in the South.
Wanamaker, in entertaining Washington as his guest, could
not possibly have intended to affront a great body of whites at the South. He
undoubtedly is aware of the views of his partner, Ogden, on the race question,
and could not have escaped the impression naturally created by the rapturous
intimacy with Odgenism of “representative” and “distinguished Southern
educators,” of “Educational statesmen,” etc., who have been co-agents or
co-workers with Booker for Ogdenism in the cause of the “democratization of the
South” banking upon special interest in the negro on the part of individuals
who never will know the negro. It was perfectly natural for Wanamaker, of pious
mind, to attribute such ecstatic intimacy to anything but a misguided
philosophy, or interest in a salary list provided by millionaire
“Philanthropy,” or an overweaning desire for notoriety on the part of
individuals who had been pondering upon great problems in “lonely isolation,”
or even the instinct to play petty politics and to ride upon an apparent wave
of popularity. His inclination to take that view of the outgivings of the
“representative Southerners” in train of Ogdenism must have been strengthened
by a statement last spring of a young president of a Virginia institution, to
the effect that the support of Ogdenism embraced everything in the South
“except provincial narrowness, petty animosity, selfish motive and ignoble
purpose,” and that its representative gathering was “dominantly made up of leading
men of our own Southern country who are devoted to the traditions and the
ideals of our fathers, who are not ashamed of the land that gave them birth,
and who, in keeping faith with the past, are also loyal to their American
citizenship and ready for the new duties of this new day, and for the manifest
destiny that awaits them.”
If Mr. Wanamaker is thoroughly acquainted with his business
partner’s career in “philanthropy” during the past 40-odd years, and if he has
carefully read all the literature of Ogdenism, he cannot be blamed unduly for
regarding the ephemeral error of a limited class in Southern education as final
conviction at the South, for thinking that the glare of noise pyrotechnics
below the Potomac was the dawn of a new American, and, falling into the
consequent mistake that Booker at the North was the manifest destiny of the
negro of the South, for endeavoring in smooth and snug “philanthropy” to hasten
the time appointed. Hence the blame for Booker’s being concerned in an event
which can only be to the detriment of his race must be laid primarily at the doors
of those Southern whites pictured as “representative,” who fell into the snare
of Ogdenism, willingly or unwillingly, and who in some cases are doubtless as
sorry for themselves as their friends are for them.
No comments:
Post a Comment