"The Upward Path: A Reader For Colored Children" (1920)
THE UPWARD PATH
A READER FOR COLORED
CHILDREN
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
ROBERT R. MOTON
PRINCIPAL OF TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE
COMPILED BY
MYRON T. PRITCHARD
PRINCIPAL, EVERETT SCHOOL, BOSTON
AND
MARY WHITE OVINGTON
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE
NEW YORK
HARCOURT, BRACE AND HOWE
COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
HARCOURT, BRACE AND HOWE, INC.
Introduction by Robert R. Moton
The Negro has been in America just about three hundred years and in that time he has become intertwined in all the history of the nation. He has fought in her wars; he has endured hardships with her pioneers; he has toiled in her fields and factories; and the record of some of the nation's greatest heroes is in large part the story of their service and sacrifice for this people.
The Negro arrived in America as a slave in 1619, just one year before the Pilgrims arrived at Plymouth in search of freedom. Since then their lot has not always been a happy one, but nevertheless, in spite of difficulties and hardships, the race has learned many valuable lessons in its conflict with the American civilization. As a slave the lessons of labor, of constructive endeavor, of home-life and religion were learned, even if the opportunity was not always present to use these lessons to good advantage.
After slavery other lessons were learned in their order. Devoted self-sacrificing souls—soldiers of human brotherhood—took up the task in the schoolroom which their brothers began on the battlefield. Here it was that the Negro learned the history of America, of the deeds of her great men, the stirring events which marked her development, the ideals that made America great. And so well have they been learned, that to-day there are no more loyal Americans than the twelve million Negroes that make up so large a part of the nation.
But the race has other things yet to learn: The education of any race is incomplete unless the members of that race know the history and character of its own people as well as those of other peoples. The Negro has yet to learn of the part which his own race has played in making America great; has yet to learn of the noble and heroic souls among his own people, whose achievements are praiseworthy among any people. A number of books—poetry, history and fiction—have been written by Negro authors in which the life of their own people has been faithfully and attractively set forth; but until recently no effort has been made on a large scale to see that Negro boys and girls became acquainted with these books and the facts they contained concerning their people.
In this volume the publishers have brought together a number of selections from the best literary works of Negro authors, through which these young people may learn more of the character and accomplishments of the worthy members of their race. Such matter is both informing and inspiring, and no Negro boy or girl can read it without feeling a deeper pride in his own race. The selections are each calculated to teach a valuable lesson, and all make a direct appeal to the best impulses of the human heart.
For a number of years several educational institutions for Negro youths have conducted classes in Negro history with a similar object in view. The results of these classes have been most gratifying and the present volume is a commendable contribution to the literature of such a course.
Robert R. Moton
Tuskegee Institute, Ala.,
June 30, 1920
CONTENTS
The Boy and the Bayonet Paul Laurence Dunbar 1
Beginnings of a Mississippi School William H. Holtzclaw 13
Up from Slavery Booker T. Washington 15
Booker T. Washington William H. Holtzclaw 20
Anna-Margaret Augusta Bird 22
Charity H. Cordelia Ray 28
My First School W. E. B. DuBois 29
Ere Sleep Comes Down Paul Laurence Dunbar 38
The Land of Laughter Angelina W. Grimke 40
The Web of Circumstance Charles W. Chesnutt 47
Is the Game Worth the Candle? James E. Shepard 48
O Black and Unknown Bards James Weldon Johnson 54
The Greatest Menace of the South William J. Edwards 56
The Enchanted Shell H. Cordelia Ray 63
Behind a Georgia Mule James Weldon Johnson 66
Hayti and Toussaint L'ouverture W. E. B. DuBois 72
His Motto Lottie Burrell Dixon 77
The Months H. Cordelia Ray 86
The Colored Cadet at West Point Lieut. Henry Ossian Flipper, U.S.A. 90
An Hymn to the Evening Phyllis Wheatley 95
Going to School Under Difficulties William H. Holtzclaw 96
The Brave Son Alston W. Burleigh 101
Victory Walter F. White 102
The Dog and the Clever Rabbit A. O. Stafford 109
The Boy and the Ideal Joseph S. Cotter 112
Children at Easter C. Emily Frazier 114
Abraham Lincoln William Pickens 117
Rondeau Jessie Fauset 120
How I Escaped Frederick Douglass 121
Frederick Douglass W. H. Crogman 128
Incident in the Life of Frederick Douglass 134
Animal Life in the Congo William Henry Sheppard 135
Coöperation and the Latin Class Lillian B. Witten 143
The Band of Gideon Joseph F. Cotter, Jr. 148
The Home of the Colored Girl Beautiful Azalia Hackley 150
The Knighting of Donald Lillian B. Witten 153
A Negro Explorer at the North Pole Matthew A. Henson 159
Benjamin Banneker William Wells Brown 166
The Negro Race Charles W. Anderson 168
Paul Cuffe John W. Cromwell 169
The Black Fairy Fenton Johnson 175
It's a Long Way William Stanley Braithwaite 181
Negro Music that Stirred France Emmett J. Scott 182
November 11, 1918 187
Sea Lyric William Stanley Braithwaite 189
A Negro Woman's Hospitality Leila A. Pendleton 190
Record of "The Old Fifteenth" in France Emmett J. Scott 192
Negro Soldiers Roscoe C. Jamison 194
The "Devil Bush" and the "Greegree Bush" George W. Ellis 195
Evening Prayer H. Cordelia Ray 199
The Strenuous Life Silas X. Floyd 200
O Little David, Play on Your Harp Joseph F. Cotter, Jr. 202
A Day at Kalk Bay, South Africa L. J. Coppin 203
Bishop Atticus G. Haygood W. H. Crogman 205
How Two Colored Captains Fell Ralph W. Tyler 207
The Young Warrior James Weldon Johnson 208
Whole Regiments Decorated Emmett J. Scott 209
On Planting Artichokes Daniel A. Rudd and Theodore Bond 210
A Song of Thanks Edward Smyth Jones 214
Our Dumb Animals Silas X. Floyd 216
A Legend of the Blue Jay Ruth Anna Fisher 218
David Livingstone Benjamin Brawley 220
Ira Aldridge William J. Simmons 224
Fifty Years James Weldon Johnson 228
A Great Kingdom in the Congo William Henry Sheppard 233
Pillars of the State William C. Jason 249
Oath of Afro-American Youth Kelly Miller 250