The Tuskegee Institute offered training to African Americans in industrial and agricultural skills.
The Tuskegee Institute was founded by Booker T. Washington, an American educator and leader in the African-American community, in 1881.<u> The students of this institute were former slaves who were taught industrial and agricultural skills in order to improve their economic conditions</u>. Washington implemented a program that included both academic and vocational education. Moreover,<u> in Tuskegee Institute, students were taught to produce their own food, to make bricks, and to raise their own buildings</u>. Therefore, Tuskegee provided the students with basic skills that they could teach to the rest of the African-American community in order to improve their living conditions.
The Battle of Lexington ended with the retreat of the colonists who were vastly outnumbered by the British. The British marched out of Lexington and made their way to Concord to seize arms and ammunition and capture any rebels that resulted in the Battle of Concord.