Johnson And The Harlem Renaissance: The Negro Movement

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The Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance, also known as “The Negro Movement” began in the early 1920s and ended in the late 1930s in Harlem, New York city, New York. The great migration was the start of African American culture expanding, they migrated from the south, into the northeast and northwest areas for various reasons such as more job opportunities, better schools, and to escape racial injustice. The ramifications for the migration was more southern countries lost a huge population of African American, the south also lost their crops to insects because African Americans where no longer there to attend to crops. However the North and Midwest gained from the migration becoming more integrated and Blacks grew confident of their
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Johnson was born march 31st 1878 in Galveston, Texas, he lived in most parts of the world but mainly Boston. Johnson was known for his lavish lifestyle and the woman he pursued, he was married three times to, Etta terry Duryca 1911-1912, Lucille Cameron 1912-1924, and Irene Pineau 1925-1946, but Johnson never had kids and all three woman was white. Johnson had been married to a black woman, Mary Austin, since 1898, but in Colorado their marriage broke up, sending Johnson into a state of depression. They had a brief reconciliation, but Johnson said that the troubles he had with women “led me to forswear colored women and to determine that my lot henceforth would be cast only with white women.” I chose him because he lived life to the richest he was tough, everyone respected him and he was a very hard working man, he used to travel the United States fighting for money till he realized that he could make a living out of fighting. Johnson was the son of a janitor, Henry Johnson and mother Tina “tiny” Johnson, whom he promised the world to. Johnson was convicted in 1912 for violating the man act (transporting his wife to be across the state before marriage.) He was sentenced to a year in prison, but he fled, a fugitive for seven years. In 1920 Johnson surrendered to the u.s marsharls; in prison Johnson would fight accasionally and after his release he would continue fighting. Often travaled around the states to