Part Eight
Benjamin York (1770s? – 1832?) Explorer, Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Mary Ellen Pleasant (1814 – 1903?) Financier, John Brown’s Raid.
Ira Aldridge (1807 – 1867) Shakespearean actor, 19th century.
Anita Bush (1883 – 1974) Founder, first black dramatic theater company.
James Earl Jones (1931 - ) Actor, stage, television, and film.
American Negro Theatre (ANT) Founded in 1940 in Harlem.
Georgia Douglas Johnson (1877 – 1966) Writer, Harlem Renaissance.
Jessie Fauset (1882 – 1961) First black woman elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
Arna Bontemps (1902 – 1973) Poet, novelist, historian, and editor.
Dorothy West (1907 – 1998) First African American female writer for the New York Daily News.
Harlem Writers’ Guild – Founded in the 1940s.
Buddy Bolden (1877 – 1931) Jazz musician, 1900s.
Willie “The Lion” Smith (1897 – 1973) Composer, innovator of “stride” piano playing.
Lillian Hardin Armstrong (1898 – 1971) Band leader, first all-female jazz ensemble in Harlem.
Ella Fitzgerald (1917 – 1996) “First Lady of Song”, 13 Grammy Awards.
Nina Simone (1933 – 2003) Singer, civil rights activist.
Clementine Hunter (1886 – 1987) Artist, the “Black Grandma Moses.”
Sister Gertrude Morgan (1900 – 1980) American folk artist.
Romare Bearden (1912 – 1988) Artist, organizer of first retrospective of African American art.
Elizabeth Catlett (1919 - ) Sculptor and artist.
John Biggers (1924 - ) Muralist.
The Ink Spots – Vocal group, 1940s.
The Mills Brothers – Vocal quartet, 1930s.
Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton (1926 – 1984) Blues singer, first to record “Hound Dog.”
Etta James (1938 - ) Blues, jazz, and soul pioneer.
Allen Allensworth (1842 – 1914) Founder, first black town in California.
Freedman’s Town – First settlement for freed slaves in Houston.
North Carolina Mutual – Oldest and largest black life insurance company.
Whitelaw Hotel – First luxury hotel for African Americans, 1919.
Auburn Avenue - Birthplace, church, and gravesite of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.