[Black and White by Timothy Thomas Fortune]@TWC D-Link book
Black and White

CHAPTER VI
15/29

Many a colored farmer boy or mechanic has been spoiled to make a foppish gambler or loafer, a swaggering pedagogue or a cranky homiletician.

Men may be spoiled by education, even as they are spoiled by illiteracy.

Education is the preparation for a future work; hence men should be educated with special reference to that work.
If left to themselves men usually select intuitively the course of preparation best suited to their tastes and capacities.

But the colored youth of the South have been allured and seduced from their natural inclination by the premiums placed upon theological, classical and professional training for the purpose of sustaining the reputation and continuance of "colleges" and their professorships.
I do not hesitate to say that if the vast sums of money already expended and now being spent in the equipment and maintenance of colleges and universities for the so called "higher education" of colored youth had been expended in the establishment and maintenance of primary schools and schools of applied science, the race would have profited vastly more than it has, both mentally and materially, while the results would have operated far more advantageously to the State, and satisfactorily to the munificent benefactors.
Since writing the above, I find in a very recent number of Judge Tourgee's magazine, _The Continent_, the following reflections upon the subject, contributed to that excellent periodical by Prof.
George F.Magoun of Iowa College.

Mr.Magoun says: May I offer one suggestion which observation a few years since among the freedmen and much reflection, with comparisons made in foreign countries, have impressed upon me?
It is this, that the key of the future for the black men of the South is _industrial_ education.


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