James Lee Dickey: An Analysis of One African-American's Leadership in Jim Crow Texas

Health

Dr. Dickey began his career in Taylor by attempting to level the field for African Americans by eliminating the handicap of illness since the effect of it was a high infant mortality rate, a shorter life expectancy, lower intelligence levels, and absenteeism at both work and school. Booker T. Washington would have been proud.
 
The most basic improvement for African Americans was (and is) improving the quality of life by ensuring better health. Booker T. Washington promoted this through his obsession with tooth brushing, bathing, clothes washing and eating healthy food. Good health would directly result in higher productivity and greater respect from the white community. Washington earned his education by cleaning the classrooms at Tuskegee. He believed poverty was no excuse for squalor. As a physician, health was naturally a focus of James Dickey’s life. His feats of heroism included:

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