August 18th is Harold’s birthday. Let’s remember his work with the Negro Actors Guild, the New York Urban League Guild, and his lifeswork, the Countee Cullen Harold Jackman Memorial Collection at Clark Atlanta University. Forthcoming is my book UNMASKING THE NEW NEGRO: HAROLD JACKMAN AND THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE.
Category: Harlem Renaissance
1919-1934 are the dates that I use to define the HR. It was an artistic movement that began with a change of perception. That perception began with Claude McKay’s poem “If We Must Die.” Writers Rudolph Fisher and Wallace Thurman died days apart in December 1934 and the HR was never the same.
Toulon, France
Here I am in Toulon. Harold was so excited to visit here. If only I could be sailing on Princess Murat’s yacht. July 8th is the 54th Anniversary of Harold Jackman’s sudden passing. My health issues have delayed my book, but it is finished, I added a chapter on the friendship between Harold and Countee and how their legacies are shaped by archives. Harold was an amazing person. The world will soon know how instrumental he was to the Harlem Renaissance.
Been digging- struck gold
It was great to spend several months in France last summer. I went to give a paper at a conference on James Baldwin and discovered that I am secretly French. Never have I felt so at home! It was as if the real me was released. Add my name to the list of Harlemites who found relative freedom abroad. The conference [James Baldwin: Transatlantic Commuter] was amazing! I so enjoyed writing both the proposal and the paper (Harlem Boy and Harlem Girl in the Ivory Tower: James Baldwin as Professor) and the positive reception that it received overwhelmed me. The conference was well planned and the participants were inspiring. Certainly the spirit of Mr. Baldwin was present.
I did not want to return to the US. Thank goodness I had the best French teacher in the world when I was in the 9th grade at Western High School in Baltimore, Maryland. Mrs. Delores Bullock (now Cassell) taught me learn French in such a way that I have never translated. I just speak French and have done so since she taught me so many years ago. If only everyone had such a vibrant and passionate teacher! Mrs. Bullock had such a beautiful voice! She sang a lot and we had to sing as well (certainly not as well as she did). She gave me a wonderful gift and I have been able to share my love of the French language with my son. Merci beaucoup, Madame! We are returning to France in June. Rather, I am going home to baguettes, wine, and the best butter cookies in the world. I sure miss Monoprix! If only I could find a job in France. . . 
I have got to let this book go, but I stumbled upon something that changed everything that I thought I knew about Harold. The book is written, but my limited resources have gotten in the way of completing it. Most days I don’t to go to work; I only want to write. But classes must be taught and my son’s gotta eat. It has been tough juggling revising and researching, but I must stop researching (except for this very significant discovery). I only hope to honor Harold’s lifelong dedication with a book that is worthy of him. Stay tuned. Jacqueline
Harold in France
I understand Mr. Jackman a bit better after spending time in Marseille. Although I never made it to Paris, I did see a photo of the exterior of the apartment building where he lived. I am still baffled …no that is not the word..awed is closer..by his selflessness. I find myself wondering if he was happy. Certainly that was his goal when he decided to stay in France yet, based upon his correpondence, he was unable to avoid his financial problems. How much things have changed and how much they have remained the same. Harold Jackman’s birthday is coming up. Hopefully next year, after my book is published, he will be remembered.
Almost There!
I am just reviewing the book one more time before submitting it. Working on this project has been an amazing experience. Hopefully this book will give Harold Jackman the recognition that he deserves for all of the work he did to establish and maintain the history of the Harlem Renaissance.
Citizens Sponsoring Committee and Harold Jackman
I am still having so much fun researching Harold’s life that it is hard to get back to revising. This week I became intrigued by his position on the Citizens’ Sponsoring Committee. This committee was in charge of the Harlem Community Art Center. I am still reading various works (Calo, Dolinar, Gwendolyn Bennett’s letters and diaries) to find out why Augusta Savage was fired and replaced by Gwendolyn. Now Miss Bennett is an interesting person too. See the interview that she gave to the Chicago Defender Jan 5, 1945.
Here is a link to a talk that I gave on how the Negro Press helped to shape the image of the New Negro.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJlDw_H32ZM
Writing, revising, and rethinking
Having spent so many years thinking and writing about Harold Jackman, I can only hope that all of my work will not be in vain.
Revising
Unmasking the New Negro: Harold Jackman and the Harlem Renaissance will hopefully be in a bookstore by this time next year. It has been such an honor to research and write about Mr. Jackman. I found out so much amazing information. His work with the Negro Actor’s Guild was particularly interesting. I will have to watch Breakfast at Tiffany’s again closely to see if I can spot him this time. 
Harold the book
Harold Jackman the collector
The Harold Jackman Countee Cullen Memorial Collection, located at Clark Atlanta University, is Mr. Jackman’s greatest legacy. After giving invaluable assistance to Carl Van Vechten when he established the James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection at Yale, Harold Jackman decided in 1942 that there should be an archive related to Negro culture at an historically Black institution. The Harold Jackman Collection was born. After Countee Cullen’s death in 1946, the title of the collection was changed to the Countee Cullen Memorial Collection.
Holdings of the collection include correspondence from Langston Hughes, Carl Van Vechten, and Countee Cullen.



