Leslie Pinckney Hill
ụdịekere | nwoke |
---|---|
mba o sị | Njikota Obodo Amerika |
aha enyere | Leslie |
aha ezinụlọ ya | Hill |
ụbọchị ọmụmụ ya | 14 Mee 1880 |
Ebe ọmụmụ | Lynchburg |
Ụbọchị ọnwụ ya | 15 Febụwarị 1960 |
ọrụ ọ na-arụ | odee uri, odee ejije, onye nkuzi |
onye were ọrụ | Cheyney State College |
ebe agụmakwụkwọ | Harvard University |
agbụrụ | Ndi Afrika nke Amerika |
Ije | Harlem Renaissance |
Leslie Pinckney Hill (14 Mee 1880 - 15 Febụwarị 1960) bụ onye nkuzi, onye edemede na onye ndu obodo America.[1]
Ndụ ya
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]Nwa nke onye bụbu ohu, a mụrụ Hill na Lynchburg, Virginia. Ọ gara ụlọ akwụkwọ praịmarị na mpaghara, ma kpọọ opi. Ezinụlọ ya kwagara East Orange, New Jersey, ebe ọ gara ụlọ akwụkwọ sekọndrị. O mere nke ọma nke ukwuu n'ụlọ akwụkwọ nke na ọ hapụrụ afọ ya nke nta, a nabatara ya na Mahadum Harvard n'afọ ya.[2] Ọ banyere Mahadum Harvard n'afọ 1899, na-agbakwunye agụmakwụkwọ ya site n'ịrụ ọrụ dị ka onye na-eje ozi. N'ebe ahụ, ọ gara klas nke William James ma na-arụsi ọrụ ike na arụmụka. A hoputara ya na Phi Beta Kappa ma gụsịrị akwụkwọ na Cum Laude . Mgbe ọ gụsịrị akwụkwọ n'afọ 1903 ọ nọrọ afọ ọzọ maka nzere masta na agụmakwụkwọ.[3]
Hill kụziri na Tuskegee Institute site n'afọ 1904 ruo afọ 1907, ma bụrụ onye isi nke Manassas Industrial Institute site n'afọ 1907 ruo afọ 1913. Na 1913 ọ ghọrọ onye isi na Cheyney, Philadelphia Institute for Colored Youth, na-elekọta mgbanwe na aha na ọnọdụ ma nọrọ ebe ahụ ruo afọ 1951 na nguzobe ya dị ka Cheyney State Teachers College.[4] N'afọ 1928 Hill bipụtara egwuregwu banyere Toussaint L'Ouverture .[5] N'afọ 1944, ọ tọrọ ntọala Camp Hope, ogige maka ụmụaka na-enweghị ihe ịga nke ọma na Delaware County. Hill bụ akụkụ nke Harlem Renaissance. Ọ nwụrụ site na ọrịa strok n'afọ 1960.[6]
Ọrụ ya
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]- Leslie Pinckney Hill (July 1915). "Negro Ideals: Their Effect and Their Embarrassments". The Journal of Race Development 6 (1): 91–103. DOI:10.2307/29738105. ISSN 1068-3380.
- 'Introduction', na Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson, ed., The Dunbar speaker and entertainer, containing the best prose and poetic selections by and about the Negro race, with programs arranged for special entertainments, 1920
- nku nke mmegbu, 1921
- Toussaint L'Ouverture: akụkọ ihe mere eme dị egwu, 1928
- Jethro; A Biblical Drama, 1931
Ogugu ọzọ
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]- Charline Howard Conyers (1 January 1990). A Living Legend: The History of Cheyney University, 1837-1951. Cheyney University Press. ISBN 978-0-9625828-0-6.
- John P. Spencer (16 August 2012). In the Crossfire: Marcus Foster and the Troubled History of American School Reform. University of Pennsylvania Press, 21–49. ISBN 978-0-8122-0766-8.
- Charline Howard Conyers (1 January 1990). A Living Legend: The History of Cheyney University, 1837-1951. Cheyney University Press. ISBN 978-0-9625828-0-6.
Edensibia
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]- ↑ Salo, Jessica Jina, Hill, Leslie Pinckney (1880-1960), BlackPast.org
- ↑ Hill, Leslie Pinckney (1880-1960) | The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed. www.blackpast.org (29 June 2008). Retrieved on 2016-02-19.
- ↑ Werner Sollors (1993). Blacks at Harvard: A Documentary History of African-american Experience at Harvard and Radcliffe. NYU Press, 123–8. ISBN 978-0-8147-7973-6. Retrieved on 19 May 2013.
- ↑ Patsy B. Perry (2006). "Leslie Pinckney Hill (1880-1960)", in Joseph M. Flora: Southern Writers: A New Biographical Dictionary. LSU Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-4855-6. Retrieved on 19 May 2013.
- ↑ Edward O. Ako, 'Leslie Pinckney Hill's Toussaint L'Ouverture ', Phylon, Vol. 48, No. 3 (1987), pp.190-95
- ↑ Hill, Leslie Pinckney (1880-1960) | The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed. www.blackpast.org (29 June 2008). Retrieved on 2016-02-19.
Njikọ mpụga
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]- Works by or about Leslie Pinckney Hill at Internet Archive
- Works by Leslie Pinckney Hill at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)