Tuskegee also contributed items from its own collection of Washington's papers and memorabilia. Dubbed the "Atlanta Compromise," the speech brought Washington to national prominence in 1895 as a powerful spokesman on race relations. Washington called for the races to work together to rebuild the South and to "blot out sectional differences and racial animosities." The speech contained one of his most memorable statements: "In all things that are purely social we can be as separate as the fingers yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress." Benjamin F. Payton, president of Tuskegee, said, "It is a source of great pride to Tuskegee University that the Washington Collection in the Library of Congress was among the first of outstanding African-Americans' papers to be brought into the national library collections and, to this day, remains one of the largest."
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