Those delivered
before the coloured people had for their main object the
impressing upon them the importance of industrial and technical
education in addition to academic and religious training.
I now come to that one of the incidents in my life which seems to
have excited the greatest amount of interest, and which perhaps
went further than anything else in giving me a reputation that in
a sense might be called National. I refer to the address which I
delivered at the opening of the Atlanta Cotton states and
International Exposition, at Atlanta, Ga., September 18, 1895.
So much has been said and written about this incident, and so
many questions have been asked me concerning the address, that
perhaps I may be excused for taking up the matter with some
detail. The five-minute address in Atlanta, which I came from
Boston to deliver, was possibly the prime cause for an
opportunity being given me to make the second address there. In
the spring of 1895 I received a telegram from prominent citizens
in Atlanta asking me to accompany a committee from that city to
Washington for the purpose of appearing before a committee of
Congress in the interest of securing Government help for the
Exposition. The committee was composed of about twenty-five of
the most prominent and most influential white men of Georgia.
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