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Booker T. Washington
In response to Thomas's book, The American Negro, Booker T. Washington criticized Thomas in his characterization of Black people and the evidence he provided. Washington started with the assertion that Thomas identifies himself as part of the negro but writes as if he were not apart. Washington rebuts Thomas's claim that Black people have been largely unsuccessful when it came to land ownership with statistics from Virginia and Georgia which showed rise in land ownership from Black people, and that Thomas would have the race rely too heavily on the government to distribute land at the jeopardy of the Black individual's independence. According to Washington, "The author of this book condemns practically every method that has been used for lifting up the negro; everything is wrong except that which he advocates, but which he himself, it seems, has failed to put into practice anywhere in the South. He advocates industrial education all through his book, yet condemns it as it now exists in many negro schools at the South." Washington continued to point out what he believed to be contradictions in Thomas's argument, such as the claim that the negro code did not allow for games involving chance yet later in the argument made claims that a severe character flaw of Black people was their indulgence of gambling. Another contradicting claim Washington pointed out was Thomas's assertion that the low birth rates and high death rates would keep Black people from ever making up a large proportion of the population, but in another argument claims that the negro population is growing by the millions. To Washington, the type of evidence Thomas collected was purely anecdotal and lacked any way to confirm such claims like a name, place, or date. Ultimately, Washington described his and the Black Community's lack of respect for Thomas to come from Thomas's lack of effort to reach out to Black people in the south, and speak to them himself.

W.E.B. DU Bois
W.E.B. Du Bois largely criticized the tone and characterizations Thomas made in his 1901 book The American Negro, finding most of the evidence dubious at best. Du Bois took interest in Thomas's tone finding the tone of the book to be despairing, describing, "its cynical pessimism, virulent criticisms, vulgar plainness, and glaring self-contradictions." Du Bois claimed that the pressures and stresses of Black life had an effect on Thomas, one that, "tends to develop the criminal or the hypocrite, the cynic or the radical." To Du Bois, Thomas falls in the category of the cynic, and for all that is hopeful in The American Negro, Thomas gives way to despair. Thomas is described as a man that went South during reconstruction to teach the negro everything he needed to know but in a rapid amount of time. He failed and left with his shattered ideal of what the negro was. Du Bois pointed out the editions of Thomas's book, how it started as a pamphlet in 1890, not receiving much attention, before being rewritten into his book in 1901. Despite being rewritten many of the ideas and writing is reused, which Du Bois attributed to what caused the contradictions, as the old ideas written ten years prior are incompatible with Thomas reformed opinions. Some of these differences from the 1901 pamphlet included a reversal of criticism, instead of defending the negro Thomas severely criticized them, and removed much of the blame he attributed to white people in the original pamphlet. Largely Du Bois found the book to be contradictory thematcially because the original pamphlet was written with hope, and still had some of those themes left over in the book, but side aside newer themes of scathing critique. While Du Bois accepted that a man can change his opinion in the course of ten years, over the ten years from the pamphlet to the book, Thomas removed himself from the Black community in the south, therefore to Du Bois, the original opinion from the pamphlet held more weight.