An
educated African-American leader, whose influence stretched
from three US presidents to across the United States, made his
boyhood home in Malden, West Virginia.
After
the Civil War, Booker T. Washington, his mother Jane Ferguson,
his brother and sister walked over 250 miles from Franklin County,
Virginia to Malden. They came to join Jane's husband, Washington
Ferguson, who had found work in the saline mines after the war.
It
was in Malden that Mr. Washington learned the many life lessons
that he used in his later years when he built Tuskegee Institute
and with his work for the betterment of the condition of African-Americans.
Mr .Washington learned to read, first self-taught from a blue
back speller his mother secured for him, then from a young African-American
man who taught the first black school in Malden. Finally from
Mrs. Viola Ruffner, for whom he worked for many years.
It
was through his work with Mrs. Ruffner that he learned the puritan
ethics of hard work, cleanliness and thrift that he carried
throughout his life. He later said that he couldn't pass a piece
of paper in the street, or an untidy yard, without wanting to
pick it up or clean it.
Mr.
Washington left Malden at the age of 16 to attend Hampton Institute
in Virginia.
The
lessons he learned in Malden secured a place at Hampton Institute.
He so thoroughly cleaned a recitation room that the admitting
matron knew he was serious about his education.
After
graduating from Hampton, Mr. Washington returned to Malden and
taught both regular school and Sunday school for many African-Americans
in the town. He married his first wife in the African Zion Church,
the oldest African-American Church in Kanawha County, where
he also taught Sunday school. He left Malden soon after to begin
his illustrious career at Tuskegee Institute. He also became
known as an honored statesman and advisor to presidents.
Wherever
Booker T. Washington went, he never forgot the lessons he learned
in Malden, West Virginia, and his impact on the town, the state
and the country are a legacy that will always be remembered.