Langston Hughes

African-American poet, playwright, novelist, and journalist. Because his father emigrated to Mexico and his mother was often away, Hughes was reared in Lawrence, Kansas, by his grandmother Mary Langston. Mary’s first husband had died at Harpers Ferry fighting under John Brown and her second husband (Hughes’s grandfather) had also been a fierce abolitionist. She helped inspire in Hughes a devotion to the cause of social justice.

A lonely child, Hughes turned to reading and writing, publishing his first poems while in high school in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1921, after a failed reunion with his father, he entered Columbia University, but left after an unhappy year. Even as he worked as a delivery man, a messmate on ships to Africa and Europe, a busboy, and a dishwasher, his verse appeared regularly in such magazines as The Crisis (NAACP) and Opportunity (National Urban League). As a poet, Hughes was a pioneer in the fusion of traditional verse with black artistic forms, especially blues and jazz.

Hughes was a leader in the Harlem Renaissance of the twenties and thirties, publishing two verse collections, The Weary Blues (1926) and Fine Clothes to the Jew (1927), as well as a novel Not Without Laughter (1930) and an embittered short-story collection The Ways of White Folks (1934). Mainly because of the depression and disillusionment with a wealthy patron, Hughes became a socialist in the 1930s. He never joined the Communist party, but he published radical verse and essays in magazines like New Masses and International Literature and spent a year (1932-1933) in the Soviet Union. Several of his plays also appeared in this decade, the most successful, Mulatto, a tragedy about miscegenation, reaching Broadway in 1935.

Around 1939, Hughes moved away from the political Left, as the apolitical tone of his autobiography The Big Sea (1940) suggests. During the war he supported the Allies with patriotic songs and sketches and published a verse collection, Shakespeare in Harlem (1942). He vigorously attacked segregation, especially in his column in the black weekly Chicago Defender, where he created a comic but incisive black urban Everyman, Jesse B. Semple, or “Simple.” Simple’s popularity over 20 years resulted in five published collections.

In 1947, as lyricist with Kurt Weill and Elmer Rice on the Broadway opera Street Scene, Hughes achieved a major critical success. After buying a house in Harlem, he lived there the rest of his life, although, as his book-length poem Montage of a Dream Deferred (1951) revealed, he feared for the future of urban blacks. His output became prodigious and included another book of verse, almost a dozen children’s books, several opera libretti, four books translated from French and Spanish, two collections of stories, another novel, a history of the NAACP and another volume of autobiography, I Wonder As I Wander (1956). He also continued his work in the theater, pioneering in the gospel musical play.

By the time of his death, Hughes was widely recognized as the most representative of African-American writers and perhaps the most original of black poets. What set him apart was the deliberate saturation of his work in the primary expressive forms of black mass culture as well as in the typical life experiences of the mass of African Americans, whom he viewed with near-total love and devotion. Despite his humane interest in other cultures and peoples, he saw blacks as his primary audience. As a result, his vast body of work, uneven in quality as it is, nevertheless rings with almost unrivaled authority and authenticity as an inspired portrait of black American culture and consciousness.

Louis Armstrong

“Pops”, “Dippermouth”, “Satchmo” or just Louis, his birthdate is traditionally July 4, 1900. One of the most familiar and beloved jazz musicians of all time, he was that genres first soloist and its first true singer. He left his mark on not only Jazz, but the entire world. Around the age of seven, he began to sing with various street bands in his hometown, New Orleans. In 1912, he was arrested for firing a gun into the air on New Year’s Eve. He was taken to the city’s Colored Waif’s Home where he received his musical education. After his release he began to perform in the city’s cabarets and soon fell under the wing of Joe “King” Oliver, the leader of the city’s best jazz band. He played in Chicago with Oliver, electrifying audiences with his talent as he grew more confident in his abilities. In 1924, he moved to New York where he set the pace that all other musicians at the time had to struggle to keep up with. Throughout his career he was continually striving to innovate, never failing to push himself as far and as hard as he could. He died in 1971.

Mahalia Jackson

1911-1972
Mahalia Jackson, the “Queen of Gospel Music,” lett a legacy of gospel recordings and performances that remain unmatched to this day.

She grew up in New Orleans, and although she was familiar with the records of Bessie Smith and other blues singers, her father, who was a preacher, allowed only religious music to be played at home. Jackson made her first record in 1934, and eleven years later she achieved national fame with “Move On Up a Little Higher,” which sold a million copies. In 1950 she made her first appearance at Carnegie Hall.

Jackson has been credited with popularizing the gospel sound with her unforgettable recordings Precious Lord, Bless This Household, and Let the Church Roll On. She won Grammy Awards for her albums Great Songs of Love and Faith and Make a Joyful Noise.

Mamie Smith

Born in 1883, Mamie Smith was the first vocalist to ever record a blues song. A vaudville and cabaret singer, her version of composer Perry Bradford’s “Crazy Blues” was a national hit in 1920. The astounding success of the single sent record companies rushing to tap the new “race” market. Though she was not a true blues singer, she set the stage for other female vocalists and she also set the trend with her stylish look. Nearly every other female blues singer of the ’20s copied her appearance.

Margaret Murray Washington

1861 – 1925
According to a report by Anna Thankful Ballantine, dean of women at Fisk University, Margaret Murray was “of good mind, of conscientious religious convictions, of unusual power in gaining influence over those younger than herself, and of ability to direct them.” While working her way through Fisk in pursuit of a teaching degree, Murray became president of a literary society and associate editor of the campus newspaper, established a friendship with W. E. B. Du Bois, and met her future husband, Booker T. Washingtonfor whom she would be wife number three and stepmother to his three children.

An outstanding organizer and activist in her own right, Margaret Murray Washington also demonstrated unwavering support for her husband’s goals, both at Tuskegee Institute and nationally. After his death in 1915, she continued to be a vital force in the Tuskegee community.