The Story of Slavery, Booker T. Washington
The Story of Slavery, Booker T. Washington
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The Story of Slavery

Author: Booker T. Washington

Narrator: Emily Foster

Unabridged: 37 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ink and Marble

Published: 03/04/2026


Synopsis

A nation is shaped by what it remembers, and this audiobook asks you to listen closely to one of its hardest truths.In The Story of Slavery, Booker T. Washington offers a clear, accessible historical account of slavery in America, written with the moral urgency of someone who was born into slavery and later became a leading educator and public voice. Rather than a novel or a single family saga, this is a concise work of American history that traces how enslavement takes root, how it is maintained through law, labor, and custom, and how its consequences echo through society. Washington’s tone is direct and instructive, making complex history understandable for general listeners.Listeners who want African American history, United States history, and the history of slavery will find a focused introduction that emphasizes human experience and social impact without losing sight of the larger historical forces. This audiobook suits anyone seeking a thoughtful listening experience on emancipation, Reconstruction era questions, and the long aftermath of bondage, presented in language meant to inform and provoke reflection.Press play and let this essential history deepen what you know and what you notice.

About Booker T. Washington

Booker T. Washington (1856–1915) was an educator, race leader, author, and founder of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute in Alabama. He was born on April 5, 1856, in Franklin County, Virginia, the son of a white slave owner he never knew and a black slave. Freed from slavery after emancipation in 1865, Washington worked as a houseboy, during which time he learned to read and write. At the time it was illegal to educate slaves in schools, so Washington's only exposure to them was when he carried his employer's daughters' books to school for them. He studied to be a teacher at the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in Virginia, a school for young blacks, and eventually became a writer and speaker on black issues and struggles.

In 1881, Washington was appointed principal of the newly opened Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute in Alabama, and he built it up into a major center of black education. By cooperating with white people and enlisting the support of wealthy philanthropists, he helped raise funds to establish and operate hundreds of small community schools and institutions of higher education for blacks. Washington had learned early the values of hard work and industrial skills and they became the foundations for the school.

For a number of years, Washington toured as a lecturer, expressing his philosophy on racial advancement, education, and accomodationist compromises for blacks. His eloquent "Atlanta Compromise" speech on September 18, 1895, at the Atlanta Cotton States and International Exposition positively appealed to northern and southern whites and blacks from the south. The fates of all were inextricably bound, he said, and he pled for greater understanding and perseverance. He emphasized that through hard work, self-discipline, and education blacks would gain their deserved respect.

Though he was strongly criticized by W. E. B. Du Bois and other black leaders and his policies repudiated by the civil rights movement, Washington remains the foremost black leader of the late 1800s. In 1901, he published his autobiography, Up From Slavery, which is still widely read today.


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