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interactions with children who were less privileged than he was, and his interest in people's life conditions is believed to have been consequential in his career as a teacher and a scholar. Brawley's father was an educated man, and
Brawley was one of nine children in the family. Because of his father's position as a church minister, Brawley's family has had to relocate on many occasions in when he was a child. Brawley's education started in his home where his mother served as his teacher until his family moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he was admitted into third grade. During his time in Nashville, despite going to a normal school, Brawley's mother still read Bible stories and verses with him on Sundays. As the son of a minister, Brawley studied Latin when he was twelve years old at Peabody Public School in Petersburg, Virginia, and he learned Greek when he was 14 years old with his father. Brawley's father introduced him to the story of The Merchant of Venice, and he moved on to read stories, such as, Sanford and Merton and The pilgrim's Progress in addition to romantic stories that he read outside his family's library.
376:(1918), 269–272. "Significant Verse," XLVIII (1919), 31–32. "Liberia Today," XLIX (1920), 181–183. "The Outlook in Negro Education," XLIX (1920), 208–213. "Significant Days in Negro History," LII (1923), 86-9"A History of the high school," LIII (1924), 545-549. "On the Teaching of English," LIII (1924), 298–304. "Not in Textbooks," LIV (1925), 34–37. "The Teacher Faces the Student," LV (1926), 320–325. "Negro Literary Renaissance," LVI (1927), 177–184. "The Profession of the Teacher," LVII (1928), 481–486. "Dinner at Talfourd's," LVIII (1929), 10–14. "Citizen of the World," LIX (1930), 387–393. "The Dilemma for Educators," LIX (1930), 206–208. "Dunbar Thirty Years After," LIX (1930), 189–191. "Ironsides: The Bordentown School," LXI (1931), 410–416. "Plea for Tory," LX (1931), 297–301. "Art Is Not Enough," LXI (1932), 488–494. "Hamlet and the Negro," LXI (1932), 442–448. "Whom Living We Salute," LXI (1932), 401–403. "A Composer of Fourteen Operas," LXII (1933), 43–44. "Armstrong and the Eternal Verities," LXIII (1934), 80–87. "The Singing of Spirituals," LXIII (1934), 209–213.
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five months and his salary to no more than thirty dollars a month. While
Brawley received a more lucrative job offer right after signing with Georgetown, because he did not want to break a contract at the start of his career, he decided to honor his contract with Georgetown and turned down a contract that would allow him to work for longer school terms and that would significantly increase his monthly pay. After the end of the school term and a year since he began his contract, Brawley headed to Atlanta for a teaching position at his former school, The Atlanta Baptist Seminary, where he continued to teach English for about eight years. While teaching at The Atlanta Baptist Seminary, Brawley pursued a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Master of Arts degree, for which he completed most of the classes during summer sessions. In 1806, he received his Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Chicago, and in 1808, he received his Master of Arts from Harvard University.
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his free time studying privately to get ahead at school. Brawley entered the
Atlanta Baptist Seminary (Morehouse College), where he became aware of the educational discrepancies in the community, at the age of thirteen -- most of his older classmates did not know much about classical literature or languages, such as Greek and Latin, which he knew plenty about. During his time at Morehouse, Brawley not only excelled in his studies but he also assisted his classmates by revising their written assignments before they submitted them to their professors. Besides his academic excellence, Brawley displayed significant leadership qualities; he managed Morehouse's baseball team; he served as quarterback for the football team and as a foreman for the College Printing Office. Additionally, he and another student founded
396:(1900), 7. "Revocation," III (1900), 4. "Samuel Memba," III (1900), 2. "T. W.," Ill (1900), 8. "As I Gaze into the Night," IV (1901), 5. "The First of a Hundred Years," (Class Song), IV (1901), 6. "Poems," IV (1901), 7 and 9. "After the Rain," VI (1903), 7. "America," VI (1903), 2. "The Peon's Child," VII (1904), 6. "My Hero," XVII (1914), 7. Reprint in The Home Mission College Review, (Raleigh), I (1928), 30. "Shakespeare," XVIII (1916), 14. Reprint in The Home Mission College Review, (Raleigh), II (1928), 26.
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Prowd and
Brawley shared common interests in travels, operas, reading. and hosting friends. Brawley and Prowd left Washington to move back to Atlanta, where Brawley was returning to teach English at The Atlanta Baptist Seminary (Morehouse College) and serve as the first dean of the institution. During his first year there since returning, he taught six classes every day in addition to other teaching tasks.
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later, he resigned from his position as a minister and returned to teaching because of incompatibility issues with the congregation's
Christianity. After quitting his ministerial position, Brawley went to teach at Shaw University in North Carolina, and a few years later, in 1931, he accepted a teaching position at Howard University in Washington, D.C., where he resided until his death in 1939.
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431:"Anniversary Hymn," Atlanta: Atlanta Baptist College Press, 1917. Written in response to the Fiftieth Anniversary of Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia. Set to music by Kemper Harreld. "Anniversary Hymn," Raleigh, 1929. Written on the occasion of the Sixty-Third Annual Founder's Day Celebration at Shaw University, Raleigh.
375:
The
Southern Workman (Hampton) "Our Debts," XLIV (1915), 622–626. "The Negro Genius," XLIV (1915), 305–308. "The Course in English in the Secondary School," XLV (1916), 495–498. "A Great Missionary," XLI (1916), 675–677. "Meta Warrick Fuller," XLVII (1918), 25–32. "William Stanley Braithwaite," XLVII
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Brawley went to the
Republic of Liberia in Africa to conduct an educational survey in 1920. Sometime after his trip, Brawley decided to become a minister just like his father in early 1921. Thus, he moved on to serve as a Baptist minister for The Messiah Congregation in Boston, Massachusetts. A year
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Brawley graduated from The
Atlanta Baptist Seminary with honors in 1901, and soon after, he launched his teaching career at Georgetown in a one-room school a few miles from Palatka, Florida where he cared for about fourteen children from first to eighth grade. At that school, the term was limited to
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As a child, Benjamin
Brawley learned that all men come from clay and that none of them should look up or down at each other, which kept him from approaching life with a pretentious attitude despite coming from a well-off family. Brawley started developing a deep concern for people as a result of his
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In his adolescence, Brawley spent most of his summers earning from different jobs; he spent one summer working on a
Connecticut tobacco farm, two summers at a printing office in Boston, and he spent some time as a driver for a white physician; besides his working summers, he spent the other half of
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The Athenaeum (Atlanta) "At Home and Abroad," II (1899), 7. "Hiawatha," II (1899), 2. "Imperfection," II (1899), 4. "The Light of Life," II (1899), 5. "The Light of the World," II (1899), 5. Reprint in The Christian Advocate, (Chicago), XI (1920), 37. "Race Prejudice," II (1899), 9. "Bedtime," III
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In 1910, Brawley accepted an invitation to become a part of the faculty at Howard University in Washington, D.C., where he met a Jamaican lady from Kingston with the name Hilda Damaris Prowd who would later become his wife. In response to their first meeting, Brawley wrote the sonnet First Sight.
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Journal of Negro History (Washington, D. C.) "Lorenzo Dow," I (1916), 265–275. "Three Negro Poets: Horton, Mrs. Harper, and Whitman," II (1917), 384–392. "Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the Negro," III (1918), 22–25. "The Promise of Negro Literature," XIX (1934),
116:
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The Voice of the Negro (Atlanta) "Christopher Marlowe," I (1904), 65. "The Plan," I (1904), 524. "The Education," II (1905), 319. "First Sight," III (1906), 409. "To One Untrue," in (1906), 341. "Paul Laurence Dunbar," III (1906),
223:, Duffield, 1918, revised edition, 1921; revised and retitled The Negro Genius: A New Appraisal of the Achievement of the American Negro in Literature and the Fine Arts, Dodd, 1937; reprinted, Biblo & Tannen, 1966.
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The North American Student (New York) "Recent Movements among the Negro People," III (1917), 8–11. (16) The Opportunity Magazine (New York) "The Writing of Essays," IV (1926), 284–287. "Edmund T. Jinkins," IV (1926),
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The Athenaeum (Atlanta) "On Some Old Letters," XIV (1908), 6–8. "To the Men of Atlanta Baptist College," XIII (1910), 21–23. "George Sale and His Message to Atlanta Baptist College," XIV (1912), 48–50.
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from 1912 to 1920 before returning to Howard University in 1937 where he served as chair of the English department. He wrote a good deal of poetry, but is best known for his prose work including:
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41:(April 22, 1882 – February 1, 1939) was an American author and educator. Several of his books were considered standard college texts, including
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The Home Mission College Review (Raleigh) "Is The Ancient Mariner Allegorical?" I (1927), 28–31. "Some Observations on High School English," II (1928), 36–42.
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The Reviewer (Chapel Hill) "A Southern Boyhood," V (1925), 1–8. "The Lower Rungs of the Ladder," V (1925), 78–86. "On Re-Reading Browning," V (1925), 60–63.
369:
Sewanee Review (Sewanee) "English Hymnody and Romanticism," XXIV (1916) 476 482. "Richard Le Gaillienne and the Tradition of Beauty," XXVI (1918), 47–60.
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119:: "... a well-known educator and writer, Brawley declined the second-place award because, he said, he had never done anything but first-class work."
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Song Collection Howard University Sings (edited), Washington, D. C., 1912. Pp. 10. Brawley wrote three of the eleven songs in the collection.
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The North American Review (New York) "Blake's Prophetic Writing," XXI (1926–1927), 90–94. "The Southern Tradition," CCXXIV (1928), 309–315.
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The Methodist Review (New York) "Wycliffe and the World War," IX (1920), 81–83. "Our Religious Re-Adjustment," XIII (1924), 28–30.
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The Southwestern Christian Advocate (New Orleans) "Shakespeare's Place in the Literature of the World," XLV (1916), 3–11.
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Distinction and Denial: Race, Nation, and the Critical Construction of the African American Artist, 1920-40.
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447:"The Baseball," Stories of the South, Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, 1931.
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The South Atlantic Quarterly (Durham) "Pre-Raphaelitism and Its Literary Relations," XV (1916), 68–81.
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453:"The Negro in American Literature," The Bookman Anthology, New York: George H. Doran Company, 1923.
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Exterior view of Graves Hall, Morehouse College (formerly known as The Atlanta Baptist Seminary)
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The English Journal (Chicago) "The Negro in Contemporary Literature," XVIII (1929), 194–202.
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450:"The Baseball," America Through the Short Story, Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1936.
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Early Negro American Writers, Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1935.
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115:(1925). In 1927, Brawley declined Second award and Bronze medal awarded to him by the
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The Champion of Fair Play (Chicago) "American Ideals and the Negro," IV (1916), 31–32.
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The Springfield Republican (Springfield) "American Drama and the Negro," II (1915), 9.
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The Christian Advocate (Chicago) "I Shall Go Forth in the Morning," XIII (1922), 18.
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The New Republic (New York) "Liberia One Hundred Years After," XXIV (1921), 319 321.
237:, Macmillan, 1921; reprinted AMS Press, 1971; reprinted Dover Publications, 2001.
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The New South (Chattanooga) "Recent Literature on the Negro," XIII (1927), 37–41.
270:, University of North Carolina Press, 1935; reprinted, Books for Libraries, 1968.
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New Era Declamations, Sewanee: The University Press of Sewanee, Tennessee, 1918.
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Citizen (Los Angeles) "Ballade of One That Died Before His Time," IX (1915), 27.
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The Christian Register (Boston) "What The War Did to Krutown," X (1920), 33–35.
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The Bookman (New York) "The Negro in American Literature," LVI (1922), 137–141.
76:
in 1908. Brawley taught in the English departments at Atlanta Baptist College,
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John W. Parker, "Phylon Profile XIX: Benjamin Brawley — Scholar and Teacher",
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William E. Harmon Foundation Award for Distinguished Achievement Among Negroes
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211:, Morehouse College (Atlanta, GA), 1917; reprinted, McGrath Publishing, 1970.
382:
The Springfield Republican (Springfield) "David Lloyd George," X (1923), 8.
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which Brawley wrote as a response to a lynching that happened in Georgia.
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340:
The Harvard Advocate (Cambridge) "Varied Outlooks," LXXXIV (1907), 67–69.
663:
639:
640:"A Bibliography of the Published Writings of Benjamin Griffith Brawley"
334:
The Dial (Chicago) "The Negro in American Fiction," LX (1916), 445–450.
607:
575:
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The Voice of the Negro (Atlanta) "Phillis Wheatley," II (1906), 55–59.
276:, University of North Carolina Press, 1936, reprinted, Kennikat, 1967.
192:
A Toast to Eggs For Breakfast" (poems), Atlanta Baptist College, 1902.
695:
Harlem Renaissance lives from the African American national biography
411:
Lippincott's Magazine (Philadelphia) "Crossroads," LXXIV (1905), 731.
316:
The Watchman-Examiner (New York) "Hymn as Literature," XIX (1930), 6.
477:, Visible Ink, in association with the Schomburg Center, 1996; p. 53
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The Crisis (New York) "Atlanta Striving," XXIIII (1914), 114–116.
68:), graduating in 1901, earned his second BA in 1906 from the
282:, University of North Carolina Press, 1937; reprinted, 1965.
408:
The Harvard Monthly (Cambridge) "Chaucer," XLV (1908), 184.
405:
Crisis (New York) "The Freedom of the Free," XX (1913), 32.
510:"Brawley, Benjamin Griffith (1882-1939)", at Blackpast.org
249:
New Survey of English Literature: A Textbook for Colleges
229:, Harcourt, 1921; reprinted, Books for Libraries, 1969.
576:"Benjamin Brawley and the American Cultural Tradition"
298:
Three Negro Poets: Horton, Mrs. Harper, and Whitman.
221:
The Negro in Literature and Art in the United States
43:
The Negro in Literature and Art in the United States
414:Survey (New York) "Battleground," XL (1918), 608.
294:(poems), Foote & Davis (Atlanta, GA), 1971.
257:, New York: Noble and Noble, Publishers, 1929.
716:"Benjamin Griffith Brawley | Encyclopedia.com"
520:Parker, John W. (May 1934). Benjamin Brawley.
164:Howard University -- Founders Library exterior
60:and Margaret Dickerson Brawley. He studied at
205:, Macmillan, 1913; 4th revised edition, 1939.
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809:(1940–1956), Vol. 10, No. 1 (1st Qtr. 1949).
829:Works by or about Benjamin Griffith Brawley
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288:, New York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1938.
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286:The Best stories of Paul Laurence Dunbar
274:Paul Laurence Dunbar, Poet of His People
217:, New York: Duffield and Company, 1918.
135:
72:, and received his master's degree from
488:"Benjamin Griffith Brawley (1882–1939)"
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199:(poems), Atlanta Baptist College, 1905.
234:A Social History of the American Negro
149:, a student journal that later became
109:A Social History of the American Negro
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203:A Short History of the American Negro
153:, in 1898, and this journal featured
101:A Short History of the American Negro
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475:The Essential Black Literature Guide
227:A Short History of the English Drama
105:A Short History of the English Drama
838:Works by Benjamin Griffith Brawley
820:Works by Benjamin Griffith Brawley
186:Publications and selected writings
113:A New Survey of English Literature
25:
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56:, Brawley was the second son of
47:New Survey of English Literature
251:, Knopf, 1925, reprinted, 1930.
87:He served as the first dean of
781:University of Michigan Press.
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883:20th-century American writers
292:The Seven Sleepers of Ephesys
261:A History of the English Hymn
27:American academic (1882–1939)
888:University of Chicago alumni
853:Benjamin Brawley Answers.com
763:Benjamin Brawley Answers.com
740:"Brawley, Benjamin Griffith"
300:The Journal of Negro History
268:Early Negro American Writers
209:History of Morehouse College
197:The Problem, and Other Poems
97:The Negro Literature and Art
93:History of Morehouse College
844:(public domain audiobooks)
744:South Carolina Encyclopedia
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308:Newspapers and periodicals
903:Howard University faculty
898:Harvard University alumni
280:Negro Builders and Heroes
39:Benjamin Griffith Brawley
893:Morehouse College alumni
878:African-American writers
777:Calo, Mary Ann. (2007).
638:Parker, John W. (1957).
574:Parker, John W. (1955).
128:Education and early life
54:Columbia, South Carolina
908:Shaw University faculty
62:Atlanta Baptist College
58:Edward McKnight Brawley
169:Career and later years
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473:Roger M. Valade III,
255:Freshman Year English
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70:University of Chicago
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720:www.encyclopedia.com
390:Poems in periodicals
302:2.4 (1917): 384-392.
492:www.historians.org
215:Africa and the War
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74:Harvard University
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824:Project Gutenberg
263:, Abingdon, 1932.
89:Morehouse College
78:Howard University
66:Morehouse College
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725:2020-11-05
522:The Crisis
458:References
656:0029-2494
600:0885-6818
266:(Editor)
155:A Prayer,
123:Biography
64:(renamed
842:LibriVox
664:23516848
363:383–385.
111:(1921);
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580:Phylon
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