In 1913, the Tuskegee campus had its own train depot.
In September 1913, with his mother’s assistance, Dawson sold his bicycle for $6 and purchased a rail ticket to Tuskegee. In order to evade his father, who opposed Dawson’s educational pursuits, he waited until his father had gone to church. He then boarded a Southern Railroad train bound for Tuskegee’s campus, not at the Anniston station, but at a local junction where his father would not think to look. He remembered later in an interview, “I got over there about 1:30 in the morning and got on that train in the colored coach and got in the men's room, the toilet, and locked the door. So when (that train) backed into the station at Anniston, I (was) not at the station. My father was out looking to see if I was going to get on that train.” He was then thirteen years old (Malone, 30; Standifer interview; Spady, M1).





























