The Man Farthest Down: A Record of Observation and Study in Europe

audiobook

The Man Farthest Down: A Record of Observation and Study in Europe

by Booker T. Washington, Robert Ezra Park

EN·~8 hours

Chapters

Description

Leaving his duties at Tuskegee for a brief sabbatical, Booker T. Washington sails for Liverpool in August 1910 with a clear mission: to walk among Europe’s poorest workers and see how their lives compare with those of Southern farm laborers. He hopes that direct observation in homes and fields will reveal the forces driving the massive wave of European emigration to America. The journey is both a personal respite and a purposeful study of a continent in transition.

Washington quickly discovers a tight link between the state of agriculture and the flow of migrants—where farms thrive, fewer people flee, and where land is barren, emigration soars. He notes that school‑based agricultural education can lift entire communities, creating small landowners and easing urban unrest. By comparing these patterns with the race and labor issues he faces at home, he begins to sketch how education, land reform, and social policy might shape the future for both European workers and African Americans.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (483K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Mary Glenn Krause, MFR, Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2020-01-23

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Booker T. Washington

Booker T. Washington

1856–1915

Born into slavery and rising to become one of the most influential Black educators of his era, he helped build Tuskegee into a major institution and became a nationally known public voice on education, work, and racial progress. His life story gives readers a close look at ambition, strategy, and survival in post-Civil War America.

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Robert Ezra Park

Robert Ezra Park

1864–1944

A pioneering urban sociologist and former journalist, he helped turn sociology toward firsthand observation of city life, race relations, migration, and the modern press. His work became a foundation for the Chicago school of sociology and for the study of everyday life in American cities.

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