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April 5 – Happy Birthday, Elihu Yale and Booker T. Washington

 Posted on April 5, 2021

This is an update of my post published on April 5, 2010:


On this day in 1649, Elihu Yale was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He and his family moved to England while he was very young, and he served as a governor in the country of India as an adult.

Despite the fact that Yale never lived anywhere in America after age three, a man named Cotton Mather wrote to Yale for help when the small Connecticut college he represented needed funds to build a new building in New Haven.

Called at the time Collegiate School of Connecticut, the institution was so grateful for the crates of goods that Yale sent (things that were sold for a pretty goodly sum of money), the new building was named after Yale. Eventually the entire university was named Yale—and it has become one of the most prestigious universities in the U.S.!




Strange but True

One of the “goods” that Yale sent to be sold as a fund raiser was “25 pieces of garlic.” I know you’re thinking, bulbs of garlic or cloves of garlic?—plus, didn’t this part of the gift make everything else in the box stinky? However, never fear: at the time, garlic was the name of a kind of cloth!

There is a Yale College in Wales (part of the United Kingdom / Great Britain) that is also named after this same Elihu Yale.


Another donor who made very generous gifts to Yale University quite likely could have had the university named after him, but unfortunately his name was Jeremiah Dummer, and the powers-that-be did not want the college to be named “Dummer College.”

Awful if true:

Some people say that Elihu Yale was a slave trader, which would pretty much spoil the name of this beautiful and highly respected university. But some historians assert that Yale wasn’t a slave trader and that he, in fact, never owned slaves and was against slavery. 

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Hmmm…I am finding it hard to figure out the truth!



On this day in 1856, Booker T. Washington was born in Virginia. He was born into slavery and was freed by the Emancipation Proclamation and the Civil War. But he was freed from hard work as a slave only to have to work hard in the salt furnaces and coal mines—even though he was just a kid!

Eventually Washington walked miles to Hampton Institute, which educated “freedmen.” There and at another school, Washington studied to become a teacher. He became the first principal of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, a new all-Black college begun in Alabama. (Today it is called Tuskegee University.)

Washington became an important Black leader, speaking and writing as well as teaching. Some Black people questioned Washington’s tactics, saying he was too accommodating to white people. However, because Washington socialized and got along with many rich white people, he was able to gain support for many black schools as well as his college.

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Interesting and True

Booker T. Washington’s mom was named Jane. Just Jane–slaves often had no “last names” or surnames. When Booker was able to go to a school for the first time, after he had been freed, the other kids were telling the teacher their names, and Booker realized that they all had two names. When it came time to tell his name, he said, “Booker Washington,” as if, he later wrote, he had been called by that name all his life.

With Washington leading the way, the students of Tuskegee Institute built their school with their own hands. They built classrooms and barns, they grew their own crops, and they raised livestock. They were able in this way to meet most of their needs. The school didn’t churn out graduates who became farmers and tradesmen, but instead it graduated teachers of farming and of the trades.



One of his books, Up From Slavery, was a best seller during his lifetime, earned him an invitation to Teddy Roosevelt’s White House, and is still widely read today.

Check out this virtual museum exhibit on Washington.

Do a jigsaw puzzle
 to see a photo of Booker T. Washington.


What was a “normal school”?

It didn’t mean an ordinary school – instead, the word normal in the name of a school meant that it was a school to train people to become teachers. (This name comes from the idea that teachers instruct kids on the norms of learning.)
 How many words for school do you know? Fill in the vowels to discover some.

1. S ___ M ___ N ___ R Y

2. ___ C ___ D ___ M Y

3. C ___ L L ___ G ___

4. ___ N S T ___ T ___ T ___

5. N ___ R S ___ R Y

6.___ N ___ V ___ R S ___ T Y

7. C ___ N S ___ R V ___ T ___ R Y

8. K ___ N D ___ R G ___ R T ___ N


9. S ___ N ___ ___ R H ___ G H


ANSWERS:

1. SEMINARY

2. ACADEMY

3. COLLEGE

4. INSTITUTE

5. NURSERY

6. UNIVERSITY

7. CONSERVATORY

8. KINDERGARTEN

9. SENIOR HIGH


I can’t believe these three photos (above and below)
are schools!
Above, looking like a cathedral, is the library called
the Cathedral of Learning, at the University of Pittsburg.
Below is the German European School Singapore.
Two below is one of the increasingly popular
“Forest Schools.”


Also on this date:


Birthday of biologist Matthias Jakob Schleiden, co-founder of the cell theory 






Anniversary of the eruption of Tambora



Anniversary of the 1893 decision to get the U.S. on the metric system





HolidayTime in Taiwan



Tomb-Sweeping Day







National Go for Broke Day




Anniversary of the Mayflower’s Return Trip



Anniversary of the discovery of Linear B – an archeological treasure





Birthday of former-slave and Union hero Robert Smalls



Birthday of scientist Hedwig Kohn


Flag Day in Ireland

(Easter Monday)


Easter Monday




 
 Dyngus Day 





 White House Easter Egg Roll





Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:
  • April holidays
  • April birthdays
  • Historical anniversaries in April

And here are my Pinterest boards for:

  • May holidays
  • May birthdays
  • Historical anniversaries in May

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