top of page

How We Help

Paving the Way to a Better Tomorrow

Untitled

Harlem Renaissance the birth of black businesses


History of Harlem Renaissance


  1. Great Migration

  2. Langston Hughes

  3. Zora Neale Hurston

  4. Countee Cullen

  5. Louis Armstrong

  6. Cotton Club

  7. Paul Robeson

  8. Josephine Baker

  9. Aaron Douglas

  10. Marcus Garvey

  11. Harlem Renaissance Ends

  12. Impact of the Harlem Renaissance

  13. Sources

The Harlem Renaissance was the development of the Harlem neighborhood in New York City as a Black cultural mecca in the early 20th Century and the subsequent social and artistic explosion that resulted. Lasting roughly from the 1910s through the mid-1930s, the period is considered a golden age in African American culture, manifesting in literature, music, stage performance and art.

SEE MORE: 

Great Migration

The northern Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem was meant to be an upper-class white neighborhood in the 1880s, but rapid overdevelopment led to empty buildings and desperate landlords seeking to fill them.

In the early 1900s, a few middle-class Black families from another neighborhood known as Black Bohemia moved to Harlem, and other Black families followed. Some white residents initially fought to keep African Americans out of the area, but failing that many whites eventually fled.

Outside factors led to a population boom: From 1910 to 1920, African American populations migrated in large numbers from the South to the North, with prominent figures like W.E.B. Du Bois leading what became known as the Great Migration.

In 1915 and 1916, natural disasters in the south put Black workers and sharecroppers out of work. Additionally, during and after World War I, immigration to the United States fell, and northern recruiters headed south to entice Black workers to their companies.

By 1920, some 300,000 African Americans from the South had moved north, and Harlem was one of the most popular destinations for these families.

Langston Hughes

This considerable population shift resulted in a Black Pride movement with leaders like Du Bois working to ensure that Black Americans got the credit they deserved for cultural areas of life. Two of the earliest breakthroughs were in poetry, with Claude McKay’s collection Harlem Shadows in 1922 and Jean Toomer’s Cane in 1923. Civil rights activist James Weldon Johnson’s The Autobiography of An Ex-Colored Man in 1912followed by God’s Trombones in 1927, left their mark on the world of fiction.

Novelist and du Bois protege Jessie Redmon Fauset's 1924 novel There Is Confusion explored the idea of Black Americans finding a cultural identity in a white-dominated Manhattan. Fauset was literary editor of the NAACP magazine The Crisis and developed a magazine for Black children with Du Bois.

Sociologist Charles Spurgeon Johnson, who was integral in shaping the Harlem literary scene, used the debut party for There Is Confusion to organize resources to create Opportunity, the National Urban League magazine he founded and edited, a success that bolstered writers like Langston Hughes.

Hughes was at that party along with other promising Black writers and editors, as well as powerful white New York publishing figures. Soon many writers found their work appearing in mainstream magazines like Harper’s.

Zora Neale Hurston

Anthropologist and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston courted controversy through her involvement with a publication called FIRE!!

Helmed by white author and Harlem writers’ patron Carl Van Vechten, the magazine exoticized the lives of Harlem residents. Van Vechten’s previous fiction stirred up interest among whites to visit Harlem and take advantage of the cultural and nightlife there.

Though Van Vechten’s work was condemned by older luminaries like DuBois, it was embraced by Hurston, Hughes and others.

Countee Cullen

Poetry, too, flourished during the Harlem Renaissance. Countee Cullen was 15 when he moved into the Harlem home of Reverend Frederick A. Cullen, the pastor of Harlem’s largest congregation, in 1918.

The neighborhood and its culture informed his poetry, and as a college student at New York University, he obtained prizes in a number of poetry contests before going onto Harvard’s masters program and publishing his first volume of poetry: Color. He followed it up with Copper Sun and The Ballad of the Brown Girl, and went on to write plays as well as children’s books.

Cullen received a Guggenheim fellowship for his poetry in and married Nina Yolande, the daughter of W.E.B. DuBois. Their wedding was a major social event in Harlem. Cullen’s reviews for Opportunity magazine, which ran under the column "Dark Tower," focused on works from the African-American literati and covered some of the biggest names of the age.

Louis Armstrong

The music that percolated in and then boomed out of Harlem in the 1920s was jazz, often played at speakeasies offering illegal liquor. Jazz became a great draw for not only Harlem residents, but outside white audiences also.

Some of the most celebrated names in American music regularly performed in Harlem—Louis ArmstrongDuke EllingtonBessie SmithFats Waller and Cab Calloway, often accompanied by elaborate floor shows. Tap dancers like John Bubbles and Bill “Bojangles” Robinson were also popular.

Recommended for you7 of Martin Luther King Jr.’s Most Notable SpeechesHow Many Died in the American Civil War?2021U.S. Capitol riotCotton Club

With the groundbreaking new music came a vibrant nightlife. The Savoy opened in 1927, an integrated ballroom with two bandstands that featured continuous jazz and dancing well past midnight, sometimes in the form of battling bands helmed by Fletcher Henderson, Jimmie Lunceford and King Oliver.

While it was fashionable to frequent Harlem nightlife, entrepreneurs realized that some white people wanted to experience black culture without having to socialize with African Americans and created clubs to cater to them.

The most successful of these was the Cotton Club, which featured frequent performances by Ellington and Calloway. Some in the community derided the existence of such clubs, while others believed they were a sign that Black culture was moving toward greater acceptance.

Paul Robeson

The cultural boom in Harlem gave Black actors opportunities for stage work that had previously been withheld. Traditionally, if Black actors appeared onstage, it was in a minstrel show musical and rarely in a serious drama with non-stereotypical roles.

At the center of this stage revolution was the versatile Paul Robeson, an actor, singer, writer, activist and more. Robeson first moved to Harlem in 1919 while studying law at Columbia University and continually maintained a social presence in the area, where he was considered an inspirational but approachable figure.

Robeson believed that arts and culture were the best paths forward for Black Americans to overcome racism and make advances in a white-dominated culture.

Josephine Baker

Black musical revues were staples in Harlem, and by the mid-1920s had moved south to Broadway, expanding into the white world. One of the earliest of these was Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle’s Shuffle Along, which launched the career of Josephine Baker.

White patron Van Vechten helped bring more serious lack stage work to Broadway, though largely the work of white authors. It wasn’t until 1929 that a Black-authored play about Black lives, Wallace Thurman and William Rapp’s Harlem, played Broadway.

Playwright Willis Richardson offered more serious opportunities for Black actors with a several one-act plays written in the 1920s, as well as articles in Opportunity magazine outlining his goals. Stock companies like the Krigwa Players and the Harlem Experimental Theater also gave Black actors serious roles.

Aaron Douglas

The visual arts were never welcoming to Black artists, with art schools, galleries and museums shutting them out. Sculptor Meta Warrick Fuller, a protégé of Auguste Rodin, explored African American themes in her work and influenced Du Bois to champion Black visual artists.

The most celebrated Harlem Renaissance artist is Aaron Douglas, often called “the Father of Black American Art,” who adapted African techniques to realize paintings and murals, as well as book illustration.

Sculptor Augusta Savage’s 1923 bust of Du Bois garnered considerable attention. She followed that up with small, clay portraits of everyday African Americans, and would later be pivotal to enlisting black artists into the Federal Art Project, a division of the Work Progress Administration (WPA).

James VanDerZee’s photography captured Harlem daily life, as well as by commissioned portraits in his studio that he worked to fill with optimism and separate philosophically from the horrors of the past.

Marcus Garvey

Black nationalist and leader of the Pan-Africanism movement Marcus Garvey was born in Jamaica but moved to Harlem in 1916 and began publishing the influential newspaper Negro World in 1918. His shipping company, Black Star Line, established trade between Africans in America, the Caribbean, South and Central America, Canada and Africa.

Garvey is perhaps best known for founding the Universal Negro Improvement Association, or UNIA, which advocated for “separate but equal” status for persons of African ancestry with the goal of establishing Black states around the world. Garvey was famously at odds with W.E.B. DuBois, who called him "the most dangerous enemy of the Negro race in America." His outspoken views also made him a target of J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI.

Harlem Renaissance Ends

The end of Harlem’s creative boom began with the stock market crash of 1929 and The Great Depression. It wavered until Prohibition ended in 1933, which meant white patrons no longer sought out the illegal alcohol in uptown clubs.

By 1935, many pivotal Harlem residents had moved on to seek work. They were replaced by the continuous flow of refugees from the South, many requiring public assistance.

The Harlem Race Riot of 1935 broke out following the arrest of a young shoplifter, resulting in three dead, hundreds injured and millions of dollars in property damage. The riot was a death knell for the Harlem Renaissance.

Impact of the Harlem Renaissance

The Harlem Renaissance was a golden age for African American artists, writers and musicians. It gave these artists pride in and control over how the Black experience was represented in American culture and set the stage for the civil rights movement.

Sources

Harlem Stomp! A Cultural History of the Harlem Renaissance. Laban Carrick Hill.
The Harlem Renaissance: Hub of African-American Culture, 1920-1930. Steven Watson.
The Harlem Renaissance: A Historical Dictionary For The Era. Bruce Kellner, Editor.




Harlem RenaissanceThe Harlem HellfightersFiorello LaGuardia Imposes Curfew to Halt Harlem RiotingThe Legendary Harlem HellfightersRenaissance

The Renaissance was a fervent period of European cultural, artistic, political and economic “rebirth” following the ...read more

Tulsa Race Massacre

During the Tulsa Race Massacre, which occurred over 18 hours from May 31 to June 1, 1921, a white mob attacked ...read more

See Photos From the Harlem Renaissance's Cultural Explosion

The New York City neighborhood of Harlem was the center of a cultural explosion from late 1910s through the mid-1930s. ...read more

Renaissance Art

Known as the Renaissance, the period immediately following the Middle Ages in Europe saw a great revival of interest in ...read more

Italian Renaissance

Toward the end of the 14th century A.D., a handful of Italian thinkers declared that they were living in a new age. The ...read more

The Great Migration

The Great Migration was the relocation of more than 6 million African Americans from the rural South to the cities of ...read more

The Roaring Twenties

The Roaring Twenties was a period in history of dramatic social and political change. For the first time, more ...read more

How the Harlem Globetrotters Rose From Midwest Obscurity to Become Global Stars: Photos

For nearly a century, the Harlem Globetrotters have brought flair and antics to the game of basketball. The team has ...read more

A Harlem Hellfighter's Searing Tales from the WWI Trenches

Like many veterans of the killing fields of World War I, Horace Pippin had a tough time shaking off the memories. So in ...read more

F. Scott FitzgeraldA Tour of Old HollywoodFlashback: Scopes Monkey - Rare Footage of the "Trial of the Century"The Birth of Bourbon18th and 21st Amendments

Post: Our Causes

Mental health is not crazy how to guide and facts

MENTAL HEALTH A DIAGNOSES OR ILLNESS CRAZY ISN'T MENTAL HEALTH Mental Health Mental health and hygiene Dept became a national and international institution around the 1950’s, with the white restraint jackets it could bebecause of the US Gov. and Queens of England feigned ignorance and intentional lying about facts of human development like Astral bodies being a reality, outer body expenses being fact because this Govt or self proclaimed Queens using this Human development to ingeniously or play people crazy to hide drug addiction, sexual habits or power strict or clout chasing methods to stay on top or in power with drug addiction. Sex addictions leading to preternatural rape. Me, sons, family affected personally with children born hiding sex addiction and social impairness not wanting to talk ro people they love to dwell in conventional normal internet relationships. Using supernatural Power, Manipulated to do Prete life tactics like having sex with a absent soul put to sleep and given an erection implemented while sleeping to give the illusion you had a dream of some one run out the room after ejaculation found in preternatural books, the only facts or proof is siderate genitals like the smell of a vengeng crack head who did not shower for days some just thought they had wet dreams cum or semen all over underwear, other factual seen their mothers or others leaving their room or caught in sexual activity or getting dressed pulling up clothes in suspicions. Only proven by DNA test or resembles in facial features growing up around cousin who are sister, brother, or uncles. Inpatient Mental health were Established in 1980’s in US Gov intentionally to hide, deny, steal from birth defected lids of secret society members and prote lfe or preternatural being indulged in drug activity during pregnancy, tempering with secret scientific material to change body or organs with no medical knowledge or understanding of actions. Internet is a 400 year law describing “ Existing in someone” shown, this is ancient now still relevant in society not cool or excepted so dealt under the table or secretive while they call organization who can't open to explain their existence, reason for starting or funding methods openly secret society a 10 hundred year existence starting with gens, Masons whose organization were formed for Masonry but bad chapters similar to departments were secrets society. Celebs ashamed of biological children who were proven and hide their children in Phych wards under narcissistic terms, the only legal way to claim someone is handicap mentally and can't handle their own financial in some cases are Jay-Z, P Diddy, Halle Maria Berry, Kimonia Lec Simmons, Beyona Knowle,s tenq Knowles, these cases in disbelief till evidence of DNA and resembles plus cover up tactics to prove the biological status of children. Now mental health is abused by the common mother or father Collins their regular or favorite cop in the precinct with excuses or 1years to hold children they never train or instill morals or independence sent away for the weekend or months not wanting to deal with a problem they created.

0 views0 comments
Post: Blog2_Post
bottom of page