Title |
Date Created |
Description |
Subject |
Collection |
Letter from W. E. B. Du Bois, January 21, 1928 |
1928-01-21 |
A letter from W.E.B. Du Bois to Countee Cullen. |
African American authors, African American men, Events and programs |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |
Correspondence Between James Weldon Johnson and Claude McKay, October 17, 1927 |
1927-10-17 |
Correspondence from James Weldon Johnson to Claude McKay about revisions to a letter. |
African American men, Harlem Renaissance, African American authors |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |
Telegram from Wallace Thruman to Harold Jackman, circa 1930 |
1925/1935 |
A telegram from Wallace Thruman to Harold Jackman. |
African American men, Harlem Renaissance, African American educators, African American authors |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |
Correspondence Between Harold Jackman and Alain Locke, October 31, 1924 |
1924-10-31 |
Correspondence from Harold Jackman to Alain Locke regarding an appointment he made. |
African American men, Harlem Renaissance, African American authors |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |
Correspondence Between Harold Jackman and Alain Locke, June 27, 1924 |
1924-06-27 |
Correspondence from Harold Jackman to Alain Locke about a potential trip to England. |
African American men, Harlem Renaissance, African American authors |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |
Bessie Smith, 1923 |
1923 |
A portrait of Bessie Smith. Written on recto: Photo, 1923, by Edward Elcha, courtesy of Rudi Blesh. Bessie Smith in 1923, the year of her first record, which sold 780,000 copies in six months. It earned her only $125, but it established her as the leading blues singer. From BESSIE SMITH: EMPRESS OF THE BLUES (Schirmer Books/Frank Music, April 15). |
African American women, Portraits and people, African American arts, Music--Performance, Singers |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |
Jean Toomer, circa 1925 |
1920/1930 |
View of Jean Toomer. |
African American authors, African American poets, Harlem Renaissance |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |
Alberta Hunter, circa 1925 |
1920/1930 |
A portrait of Alberta Hunter. Written on recto: All my love to my darling Harold Sincerely, Alberta |
African American women, Portraits and people, African American arts, Singers |
Countee Cullen-Harold Jackman Memorial Collection |