Charles W. Green Explained

Charles W. Greene
Birth Date:c. 1849
Birth Place:Gatesville, North Carolina
Fields:Agriculture, Real estate development
Workplaces:Tuskegee Institute
Education:Hampton Institute
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Charles Walter Greene (c. 1849-1926) was the first teacher of agriculture at Tuskegee Institute and the second head of the Agriculture Department at Tuskegee. He was a graduate of Hampton Institute and classmate of Booker T. Washington.[1] He took over as Tuskegee Institute's farm manager in June 1888.[2] The school had mostly trained teachers up until then. George Washington Carver was recruited to the Agriculture faculty in 1896.[3]

Greene was born in Gatesville, North Carolina in about 1849.[4] Although several years older, Greene was a classmate, friend, and roommate of Booker T. Washington at Hampton Institute.[5] Each had a prominent role in the program for their graduation in 1875.[6]

Greene came to work at Tuskegee in June, 1888.He went out to rural areas to teach farmers about newly identified and other improved agricultural practices, preceding the development of extension services for Black farmers.

Before the turn of the century, Washington instructed Greene to acquire property to develop a village area that would be entirely owned and operated by "Negroes" and demonstrate their capability and establish economic independence. The district was formally designated in 1901 and named Greenwood, entirely apart from the school. Following Washington's 1905 visit to Arkansas, Indian Territory and Oklahoma, and his speech in Tulsa suggesting the Tuskegee Greenwood District as an example of what he was recommending, Tulsa named its Negro-owned district Greenwood in 1906.

In 1910, Greene accompanied Washington on his visit to North Carolina (one of five such public tours surveys Washington made from 1908 to 1912 to southern states and Texas), to encourage economic development, independence, self-help, and race pride. In 1940, a plaque at Tuskegee Institute was unveiled to commemorate Greene's service.[4]

He wore a bowtie and glasses.[7] William James Edwards was one of his students.[8] William Henry Holtzclaw also studied under him before moving on to the printing department.[9] Martin A. Menafee also worked on the farm.[10] George Washington Carver was recruited to work in the Agriculture Department in 1896.[11]

Notes and References

  1. The Role of Tuskegee Institute in the Education of Black Farmers. Jones, Allen W.. 1975. The Journal of Negro History. 60. 2. 252–267. 10.2307/2717374. 2717374. 149916547.
  2. Web site: The Southern Workman. January 27, 1901. Hampton Institute Press. Google Books.
  3. Web site: HISTORIC RESOURCE STUDY tJUSKEGEE INSTITUTE NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA. npshistory.com/. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20160414033655/http://npshistory.com/publications/tuin/hrs.pdf . 2016-04-14 . April 22, 2020.
  4. Web site: Charles W Kelly & Charles W Greene Plaque (Greenwood dedication). December 7, 1940. 2. newspapers.com.
  5. Web site: The Tuskegee News -- 09/28/2000, Page 8. tkg.stparchive.com. 2020-04-22.
  6. Book: Washington . Booker T. . Daniel . Pete R. . Harlan . Louis R. . Booker T. Washington Papers Volume 2: 1860-89. October 1972 . University of Illinois Press . 978-0-252-00243-4 . 98 .
  7. Book: Hersey, Mark D.. My Work Is That of Conservation: An Environmental Biography of George Washington Carver. May 1, 2011. University of Georgia Press. 9780820339658.
  8. Web site: Twenty-Five Years in the Black Belt. William James. Edwards. December 23, 2019. Good Press. Google Books.
  9. Book: Holtzclaw, William Henry. The Black Man's Burden. April 18, 1915. Neale Publishing Company. 9780837129327. Google Books.
  10. Web site: Tuskegee and Its People by Booker T. Washington: Martin A. Menafee of Denmark, South Carolina. www.online-literature.com.
  11. Book: McMurry, Linda O.. George Washington Carver, Scientist and Symbol. 1981. Oxford University Press. 0-19-502971-2.