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  1. Alice Dunbar Nelson (July 19, 1875 – September 18, 1935) was an American poet, journalist, and political activist. Among the first generation of African Americans born free in the Southern United States after the end of the American Civil War , she was one of the prominent African Americans involved in the artistic flourishing of the Harlem ...

  2. Mar 12, 2020 · On September 18, 1935, Alice Dunbar-Nelson passed away from heart related problems in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After a life full of passion and progression, her relatives sought to preserve her legacy, and in 1984, her diary was published, detailing the many facets of Dunbar-Nelson’s life.

    • Grace Miller
  3. Feb 21, 2020 · Alice Dunbar-Nelson was a middle-class biracial, queer woman who held many identities within herself at the turn of the twentieth century. She was a poet, author, activist, educator, and philanthropist who spent her career trying to improve the quality of Black Americans’ lives.

  4. Because she was a prolific, influential, and often brilliant writer whose output never ceased from her teens in late- nineteenth- century New Orleans until her death in Philadelphia in 1935.

  5. Jul 19, 2022 · Nearly one hundred years removed from the characters in her first collection, Violets and Other Tales, Dunbar-Nelson’s New Orleans was not a place that I knew. But I would slowly come to recognize her beloved, complicated city as I drove and walked around with a more focused purpose.

  6. Feb 1, 2021 · In 1902, after Paul nearly killed her, the two formally separated. He died four years later at age 33. Her literary accomplishments continued to compile after her estranged husband’s passing....

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  8. Apr 12, 2019 · Alice Dunbar-Nelson left Paul Dunbar in 1902, moving to Wilmington, Delaware. He died four years later. Alice Dunbar-Nelson worked in Wilmington at Howard High School, as a teacher and administrator, for 18 years.

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