Metadata
Title
Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library
Category
undergraduate
UUID
db956c97e740435ab549af94c281ba24
Source URL
https://beinecke.library.yale.edu/blogs/james-weldon-johnson-memorial-collection
Parent URL
https://afamstudies.yale.edu/research-and-collections
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T07:04:02+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library

Source: https://beinecke.library.yale.edu/blogs/james-weldon-johnson-memorial-collection Parent: https://afamstudies.yale.edu/research-and-collections

James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection

The James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection (JWJ) documents and celebrates the cultural and artistic achievements and the intellectual and political activities of African Americans.

September 10, 2025

A new website makes the ongoing research accessible to family members, scholars, and the public. - ## Overlooked No More: Gwendolyn B. Bennett, Harlem Renaissance Star Plagued by Misfortune (New York Times)

September 6, 2024

“I really think of her almost like a poster child of the youthfulness of the movement at that point,” Melissa Barton, a curator of drama and prose for the Yale Collection of American Literature, said in an interview. - ## Seeing Dances of the Harlem Renaissance, in Vivid Color (New York Times)

September 3, 2024

Along with the researchers Allyson Torrisi and Dahlia Kozlowsky, I dove into the archives of the New York Public Library, Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library and the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., among others. After combing through thousands of black-and-white images from the early 20th century, I knew I wanted to depict this story of Black dance — as much about the present as the past — in vivid color. - ## Declaring Freedom: Declaration of Independence and Other Documents of National History on View through July 15, 2024

June 20, 2024

The Beinecke Library marks the 248th anniversary of the nation’s founding with a display of vital documents of United States history from Yale Library special... - ## Baldwin Set to Music at Arts & Ideas (The Arts Paper)

June 18, 2024

The concert held particular weight in its coincidence with the birthday of writer and civil rights activist James Welden Johnson, for whom Beinecke’s collection of materials related to African American politics and culture is named. The James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection contains an original copy of Johnson’s lyrics for “Lift Every Voice and Sing”—colloquially the Black National Anthem—as well James Baldwin’s letters, among other things. “There are lots of materials related to liberation in this library,” said Beinecke’s Community Engagement Director Michael Morand before the performance. “All are welcome to do research in this place.” (To access materials held in the Beinecke, members of the public should register with the Yale library system.) Morand first encountered Harris at Bill Lowe’s performance at the Beinecke for last year’s Arts & Ideas festival, where Harris played piano. Afterwards, Morand spoke with Harris about his own work and thought that the Baldwin theme related perfectly to Beinecke’s materials on the author as well as the Baldwin centennial. “I had high expectations,” Morand said after the performance. “But this was phenomenal.” - ## Beinecke Jazz Reframes Reality (New Haven Independent)

June 18, 2024

As the music swelled to a triumphant peak, Harris encouraged the audience to clap along, which many had already been doing. Then he urged them to their feet, until the entire room was dancing in place. This also meant they were in exactly the right position for a standing ovation, which, as the movement ended, they happily gave. Harris hoped his audience left with a feeling of deep meaning, from both Baldwin and himself. ​“The words of Baldwin that move them, I hope my music moves them in the same way,” he said. If the bright smiles and energetic applause were anything to go by, he had succeeded in his mission. - ## Bringing truth to light

May 28, 2024

“Shining Light on Truth: New Haven, Yale, and Slavery” is free and open to the public through August 2024. The New Haven Museum, located at 114 Whitney Avenue in New Haven, is open Wednesday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Saturday, noon to 5:00 p.m. - ## Yale Film Archive Adds Sound to Silents (New Haven Independent)

April 5, 2024

As Yale Film Archive launches into the last quarter of its 2024 spring semester programming, it offered something a little different on Thursday evening: silent films that each had a special distinction. The first, presented in conjunction with the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, was a selection of Solomon Sir Jones Films from 1924 to 1928 that are currently a part of the library’s holdings. The second was a showing of Within Our Gates, a 1920 film written, produced, and directed by Oscar Micheaux; it’s the oldest known surviving film with a Black director. One more bonus: both films on this evening were accompanied by live music, played by pianist Donald Sosin. - ## The Rent Was Too High So They Threw a Party (New York Times)

March 28, 2024

Minnie Pindar was at home in Harlem on a Saturday in 1929, and she had a party to throw. She and her sister, Lucibelle Pindar, had passed out invitations, printed on cheap, white card stock, promising a good time in their ground floor apartment at 149 West 117th Street. “Refreshments Just It” and “Music Won’t Quit,” the invitation read. Their invitation, one of dozens of similar party invitations tucked into the Langston Hughes papers at Yale’s Beinecke Library, hints at the rich but difficult lives of Black people living in New York at the dawn of the Harlem Renaissance. - ## The Dinner Party That Started the Harlem Renaissance (New York Times)

March 21, 2024

On March 21, 1924, Jessie Fauset sat inside the Civic Club in downtown Manhattan, wondering how the party for her debut novel had been commandeered. The celebration around her was originally intended to honor that book, “There Is Confusion.” But Charles S. Johnson and Alain Locke thought the dinner could serve a larger purpose. What if the two Black academic titans invited the best and brightest of the Harlem creative and political scene? What if, over a spread of fine food and drink, they brought together African American talent and white purveyors of culture? If they could marry the talent all around them with the opportunity that was so elusive, what would it mean to Black culture, both present and future?