Booker T. Washington, the founder of Tuskegee Institute, delivered an address at Memorial Hall in Columbus, Ohio, May 24, 1900.
The  description of an was recorded in 
The Booker T. Washington Papers, Vol.  5: 1899-1900, (University of Illinois Press, 1976, p. 543-544): 
 
 "
Dr. Washington walked on the stage at Memorial Hall with a firm, confident tread, as one sure of his ground.
His  shoulders are broad and six feet of stature gives strength and poise to  command respect. His hair is close cut and gives him the aspect of a  war dog with all its tenacious fighting spirit. 
 
 The eyes,  however, gleam with kindliness and they temper the appearance of the  latent fighting forces.... His jaw has the firmness of one who has the  courage to stand by his convictions..."
The description of 
Booker T. Washington continued:

"'It's easy to see how that man succeeds,' whispered a delegate to the Bible students' conference after looking at the speaker.
John R. Mott, general secretary of the student movement of North America, presided at the afternoon meeting at Memorial Hall...
Mr. Mott announced 
Dr. Washington's subject as 'The Place of the Bible in the Uplifting of the Negro Race.'" 
 
 The description ended:
"
Dr.  Washington began his address after a quartet sang. 
He spoke of the 91  Y.M.C.A. Organizations for colored youths; of the 5000 colored men  studying the Bible, and of the 640 Bible students at Tuskegee, and  pointed these as living examples of the progress of the Negro.
He pleaded for two more secretaries to teach Bible in the South-land." 
 Get the booklet BOOKER T. WASHINGTON-American HeroBooker T. Washington
 Get the booklet BOOKER T. WASHINGTON-American HeroBooker T. Washington continued May 24, 1900:
"The  Negro who does the shooting is uneducated and without Christian  training...
Of all the graduates from Tuskegee Institute only one had  been since sentenced to the penitentiary...
So the work today is  to make religion the vital part of the Negro's life.
But this is a  stupendous task, as there is a nation of Negros..." 
 
 He added:
"Just  remember that the Negro came out of Africa a few centuries ago...chains  upon his ankles and wrists. 
He came out of that...with a hammer and a  saw in his hands and a Bible in his hands.
No man can read the  Bible and be lazy. Christianity increases a man's...capacity for labor.  The Negro doesn't run from the Bible, either." 
 Booker T. Washington
 Booker T. Washington stated:
"If you want to lift yourself up, lift up someone else." 
 Get the book George Washington Carver-His Life and Faith in His Own WordsBooker  T. Washington
 Get the book George Washington Carver-His Life and Faith in His Own WordsBooker  T. Washington believed that to be great, one should read the Bible,  (
The Booker T. Washington Papers, Vol. 3: 1889-95, ed., Louis R. Harlan,  Univ. of Illinois Press, 1974, p. 93):
"As a rule a person  should get into the habit of reading his Bible. 
You never read in  history of any great man whose influence has been lasting, who has not  been a reader of the Bible. 
 
 Take Abraham Lincoln and Gladstone.  Their lives show that they have been readers of the Bible. 
If you wish  to properly direct your mind and necessarily your lives, begin by  reading the book of all books.
Read your Bible every day, and you will find how healthily you will grow." 
 
 In his address at Memorial Hall in Columbus, Ohio, May 24, 1900, 
Booker T. Washington stated: 
"The  men doing the vital things of life are those who read the Bible and are  Christians and not ashamed to let the world know it." 
 
 Booker T. Washington stated:
"
Those  who have accomplished the greatest results are those...who never grow  excited or lose self-control, but are always calm, self-possessed,  patient and polite."
Get the book AMERICAN MINUTE-Notable Events of American Significance Remembered on the Date They OccurredBooker T. Washington believed a religious  life was key to freedom,  usefulness and honor, as he wrote in 
Putting  the Most into Life (NY:  Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., 1906, ch. "Making  Religion a Vital Part of  Living," p. 23-25): 
 
 "Educated men and  women, especially those  who are in college, very often get the idea that  religion is fit only  for the common people. No young man or woman can  make a greater error  than this... 
 
 My observation has taught me  that the people who  stand for the most in the educational and commercial  world and in the  uplifting of the people are in some real way connected  with the  religious life of the people among whom they reside.
This being true we ought to make the most of our religious life..." 
 Booker T. Washington
 Booker T. Washington continued:
"First   the habit of regular attendance at some religious service should be   cultivated. This is one of the outward helps toward inward grace...
As you value your spiritual life, see to it that you do not lose the spirit of reverence for the Most High...
Do not mistake denominationalism for reverence and religion. Religion is life, denominationalism is an aid to life." 
 
 He added:
"Systematic   reading and prayerful study of the Bible is the second outward help   which I would commend to those whom I wish to see make the most of their   spiritual life. 
Many people regard the Bible as a wonderful piece of   literature only...  
Nowhere in all literature can be found a finer   bit of oratory than St. Paul's defense before King Agrippa. But   praiseworthy as this kind of study is, I do not believe it is   sufficient. 
The Bible should be read as a daily guide to right living   and as a daily incentive to positive Christian service..." 
 Booker T. Washington
 Booker T. Washington went on:
"To   live the real religious life is in some measure to share the character   of God. 
The word 'atonement,' which occurs in the Bible again and  again,  means literally at-one-ment.
To be at one with God is to  be like  God.  
 
 Our real religious striving, then, should be to become one  with  God, sharing with Him in our poor human way His qualities and   attributes.
To do this, we must get the inner life, the heart   right, and we shall then become stronger where we have been weak, wise   where we have been foolish..." 
 Booker T. Washington
 Booker T. Washington concluded:
"We   must learn to incorporate God's laws into our thoughts and words and   acts. 
Frequent reference is made in the Bible to the freedom that comes   from being a Christian.
A man is free just in proportion as he   learns to live within God's laws...
As we learn God's laws and grow into   His likeness we shall find our reward in this world in a life of   usefulness and honor.
To do this is to have found the kingdom of God, which is the kingdom of character and righteousness and peace." 
 
 By   the time of 
Booker T. Washington's death, Tuskegee Institute had grown   to 2,000 students and a faculty of 200 teaching 38 trades.
In 1905, visitors came to Tuskegee from 16 countries, including Africa, India, China, Japan, Poland and Russia. 
 Booker   T. Washington
 Booker   T. Washington sent Tuskegee graduates to 
Liberia, West Africa. 
He even   sent his personal envoy, Emmitt Scott, to discourage France from   annexing 
Liberia, helping to preserve
 Liberia's independence. 
 
 Ten   years before the U.S. Chamber of Commerce was formed, 
Booker T.   Washington founded the National Negro Business League in 1900, growing   it to 600 chapters.
Booker T. Washington was visited by Republican President   William McKinley.  
 
 To the protests of Democrats, 
Booker T. Washington had dinner at the White House with 
Republican President   Theodore Roosevelt, and met with Republican President William Howard Taft.
Booker T. Washington spoke from New Hampshire to California, Minnesota to Florida, and even   Europe, where he was received by the Queen of England in Windsor  Castle. 
 Booker  T. Washington
 Booker  T. Washington was the first African American to  have his image on a  U.S. postage stamp, 1940, a U.S. Coin, 1946, and  was the first African  American elected to the Hall of Fame, 1945. 
 Booker T. Washington
 Booker T. Washington was awarded an honorary doctorate from Dartmouth and an honorary Master's Degree from Harvard.
Harvard President Charles W. Eliot spoke at Tuskegee's 25th anniversary in 1906, stating:
"By 1905, Tuskegee produced more self-made millionaires than Harvard, Yale and Princeton combined." 
 Booker T. Washington
 Booker T. Washington stated:
"Anyone   can seek a job, but it requires a person of rare ability to create a   job...
What we should do in our schools is to turn out fewer job seekers   and more job creators."

Widowed twice, his third wife outlived   him. 
He had one daughter, Portia, and two sons, Booker T. Washington Jr.   and Ernest Davidson Washington.
When 
Booker T. Washington died on NOVEMBER 14, 1915, Andrew Carnegie stated:
"I   mourn with you today as one who shares your sorrow. America has lost   one of her best and greatest citizens. History is to tell of two   
Washingtons. 
One the leader of his country and the other the leader of   his race." 
 
 After 
Booker T. Washington's death, 
Vice-President   Calvin Coolidge traveled to Tuskegee in 1923 and met with Robert Russa   Moton, the Principal of Tuskegee Institute.
In 1924, 
Calvin Coolidge, now the President, received Tuskegee Principle Robert Russa Moton at a meeting in the White House. 
 
 Secretary of the Navy John D. Long spoke in honor of 
Booker T. Washington at Tuskegee:
"I   cannot make a speech to-day. My heart is too full-full of hope,   admiration, and pride for my countrymen of both sections and both   colors.
I am filled with gratitude and admiration for your work,   and from this time forward I shall have absolute confidence in your   progress and in the solution of the problem in which you are engaged.   The problem, I say, has been solved..." 
 
 Long continued:
"A   picture has been presented to-day which should be put upon canvas with   the pictures of Washington and Lincoln, and transmitted to future time   and generations 
- a picture which the press of the country should  spread  broadcast over the land, a most dramatic picture, and that  picture is  this: 
 'The President of the United States (Theodore  Roosevelt)
 'The President of the United States (Theodore  Roosevelt)  standing on this platform; on one side the Governor of  Alabama, 
on the  other, completing the trinity, a representative of a  race only a few  years ago in bondage, 
the colored President of the  Tuskegee Normal and  Industrial Institute.'
God bless the  
President under whose  majesty such a scene as that is presented to the  American people. God  bless the State of Alabama, which is showing that  it can deal with this  problem for itself.
God bless the orator,  philanthropist, and 
 disciple of the Great Master - who, if He were on  earth, would be doing  the same work - Booker T. Washington."
 America's God and Country Encyclopedia of Quotations
America's God and Country Encyclopedia of Quotations