Booker T. Washington.
In 1881, the Alabama Legislature appropriated $2,000.00 to begin a “Normal School for Colored Teaching” at Tuskegee, Alabama. A citizen’s committee appointed Booker T. Washington as the school’s first principal. The school balanced intellectual rigor with industrial learning. During Washington’s tenure, Tuskegee grew from 30 students in a one-room shanty to a campus of 1,500 students, more than 100 buildings (most of which were built by students), and a $2 million endowment. Dawson arrived at the Tuskegee Institute in 1913, more than 30 years after its founding and two years before it's first principal, Booker T. Washington, passed away. (Johnson, 16; Washington, 38-39).

































