- William Stanley Braithwaite
William Stanley Beaumont Braithwaite was a
writer ,poet andliterary critic , born on Dec. 6, 1878 inBoston , Mass.At the age of 12, upon the death of his father, Braithwaite was forced to quit school to support his family. At age 15 he apprenticed to a typesetter for the Boston
publisher , Ginn & Co., where he discovered an affinity for lyric poetry and begun to write his own poems.From 1906 to 1929 he contributed to the
Boston Evening Transcript , eventually becoming its literary editor. He also wrote articles, reviews and poetry for many other periodicals and journals, includingAtlantic Monthly , theNew York Times , and theNew Republic In 1918 he was awarded the
Spingarn Medal by theNational Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP ).In 1935, Braithwaite assumed a professorship of creative literature at
Atlanta University .In 1946 he, his wife, Emma Kelly, and their seven children moved to
Sugar Hill , a neighbourhood inHarlem ,New York , where Braithwaite continued to write and publish poetry, essays and anthologies. He died in Harlem on June 8, 1962.William Stanley Braithwaite published three volumes of his own poetry:
*"Lyrics of Life and Love", 1904,
*"The House of Falling Leaves", 1908
*"Selected Poems", 1948.References
* [http://www.hometoharlem.com/Harlem/hthcult.nsf/notables/williamstanleybraithwaite Home to Harlem website, article on Braithwaite]
External links
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