Anne Spencer

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Spencer, Anne (1882–1975), poet, librarian, community activist, and muse and confidante to Harlem Renaissance intellectuals and literati. Anne Spencer was born inauspiciously on a Virginia plantation. Yet the combination of loving, though irreconcilable, parents and an unorthodox, isolated youth formed her extraordinary independence, introspection, and conviction.

Her father, Joel Cephus Bannister, of African American, white, and Native American descent, and her mother, Sarah Louise Scales, the mulatta daughter of a slaveholder, separated when Spencer was six. While her mother worked as an itinerant cook, Spencer roomed with foster parents in Bramwell, West Virginia, where no other black children lived. In insular and parochial Bramwell, she was groomed for the African American bourgeoisie. Her mother dressed her in the finest frocks she could afford and withheld her from an outlying school that enrolled working-class children until she could attend Lynchburg's Virginia Seminary with socially suitable African American students. Spencer entered the seminary at age eleven. At seventeen, she graduated as valedictorian.

Two events there redirected her life. With a sonnet, “The Skeptic” (1896), she began writing poetry; and she met her husband, Edward. They settled in Lynch-burg and raised three children. In 1918 Spencer was visited by James Weldon Johnson (The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man, 1912), then field secretary for the NAACP. Their meeting launched a lifetime friendship—and with “Before the Feast at Sushan,” submitted to the the Crisis (1920), it inaugurated her publishing era.

Such poems as “At the Carnival” (1922), “Lines to a Nasturtium” (1926), “Substitution” (1927), and “Requiem” (1931) share the Romantics' affection for the ordinary and simple, retreat to nature's purity and peace, quest for love, disillusionment with earthly vanities, and passionate contemplation of eternity. Spencer flaunted tradition as much as she acknowledged it, laying claim to a modern poet's signature with sinister rhythms, slanted rhymes, blunt rejection of religious dogma, and enigmatic symbolism. During the 1920s, largely due to Johnson's mentorship, she published in such intellectual race magazines as the Crisis and Opportunity, in general anthologies of American poetry, in poet Countee Cullen's Caroling Dusk (1927), in Johnson's Book of American Negro Poetry (1922), and in Alain Locke's The New Negro (1925), the official mission declaration of Harlem Renaissance (New Negro movement) writers and artists.

She detested an editorial process that misread her meanings, misunderstood her motives, mercilessly alluded to her inconsistent output, and miscategorized her poems as either much too subtle or too subtly militant. For many poems, including “White Things” (1923) and “Grapes: Still-Life” (1929), Spencer stood at variance with editors and publishers who censored statements of racial and sexual equality and rejected whatever they judged too controversial and/or experimental for American audiences. Consequently, she confined her editorial submissions to a decade, and she never published a poetry collection. Of her thousands of unpublished writings, including a novel and cantos commemorating John Brown, some fifty remain.

Her paradoxical lifestyle kindled her writing. During the depression and World War II, her salon at 1313 Pierce Street hosted notables from W. E. B. Du Bois to Paul Robeson. Yet she so enjoyed the solitude of her garden that Edward erected a cottage for her there, naming it Edankraal, and he hired housekeepers to liberate her from the average southern woman's sentence to domestic drudgery. “The Wife-Woman” (1922), “Lady, Lady” (1925), and “Letter to My Sister” (1927) confide Spencer's ambivalence about matrimony, motherhood, feminism, and the unattainability of gender equality for African American women. They identify the masculine prerogatives of seclusion, intellect, and leisure served by the madonnas found everywhere in productions of the Harlem Renaissance.

Spencer frequently abandoned her privacy to antagonize local racists and class snobs. She organized Lynchburg's NAACP chapter, opened a library at the African American Dunbar High School, and offered sanctuary to the pygmy Ota Benga, who had been exhibited in zoos as a specimen of African inferiority. She infuriated African Americans with her scandalous fondness for pants and stubborn opposition to integration of public schools. Lynchburg's whites, in turn, sniffed their noses at her interracial friendships and scathing editorial disclaimers against the alleged self-evidence of white superiority.

Spencer's overall contribution has been to refocus critical attention on the stake that southern African American writers, virtually dismissed, have held in the enduring legacy of the Harlem Renaissance. At once homespun and urbane, her writings complicate the arbitrary amputation of New Negroes into either the folk, epitomized by Langston Hughes's Simple stories, or the bourgeois mulattoes of Jessie Redmon Fauset's novels. Finally, Spencer's complexity advances our assessment of African American women writers in general, placing her at the center of a feminist renaissance midwifed by her forward vision.

Bibliography

  • J. Lee Greene, Time's Unfading Garden: Anne Spencer's Life and Poetry, 1977.
  • J. Lee Greene, “Anne Spencer of Lynchburg,Virginia Cavalcade 27 (1978): 178–185.
  • Cheryl A. Wall, “Poets and Versifiers, Singers and Signifiers: Women of the Harlem Renaissance,” in Women, the Arts, and the 1920s in Paris and New York, ed. Kenneth W. Wheeler and Virginia Lee Lussier, 1982, pp. 74–99.
  • William Drake, The First Wave: Women Poets in America, 1915–1945, 1987.
  • Charita M. Ford, “Flowering a Feminist Garden: The Writings and Poetry of Anne Spencer,Sage 5 (Summer 1988): 7–14.
  • Maureen Honey, Shadowed Dreams: Women's Poetry of the Harlem Renaissance, 1989

—Barbara McCaskill

poet; writer

Personal Information

Born Annie Bethel Scales Bannister on February 6, 1882, in Henry County, VA; raised by mother in Bramwell, WV; married Edward Spencer, 1901; three children. Died on July 27, 1975, in Lynchburg, VA.
Education: Graduated from Virginia Seminary, Lynchburg, VA, 1899.

Career

Poet. Discovered by James Weldon Johnson during Johnson's visit to establish Lynchburg NAACP chapter, 1917; "Before the Feast of Shushan" published in Crisis, 1920; about 20 poems published, 1920s and 1930s; librarian, Dunbar High School branch library, Lynchburg, 1923-43; civil rights activism in Lynchburg from 1920s onward; wrote fiction and historical material later in life; many poems and other writings destroyed at death.

Life's Work

A major poet of the Harlem Renaissance period of the 1920s and 1930s, Anne Spencer was for many decades much less well known than her male counterparts of the day. Few of her works were published during her lifetime, and at the end of her life many of her manuscript poems were tragically destroyed. She lived for much of her life not in the African-American intellectual center of New York, but in the remote foothill town of Lynchburg, Virginia, and her works for the most part referred only indirectly to the racial themes that other poets met head-on. In recent years, however, scholars and general observers have reached a new appreciation of the subtlety of Spencer's work and of her unique ways of surmounting the obstacles that she faced as a black woman poet.

Spencer was born Annie Bethel Scales Bannister on February 6, 1882, in Henry County, Virginia. Her father, a sometime tavern-keeper of black and Seminole ancestry, often clashed with her mother, the daughter of a Virginia aristocrat and his slave mistress, and the couple separated when Spencer was five. Mother and daughter moved to Bramwell, West Virginia, in coal-mining country, and Spencer ended up in foster care with friends of her mother's while her mother worked as a cook.

Enrolled at Virginia Seminary

Spencer's education was a curious one. She had minimal formal schooling as a child, for her mother had little use for the rough and rowdy ways of the miners' families who comprised the student population at the only school for Blacks in the area. But she learned to read from magazines and popular novels brought home by her foster father, and because she interacted mostly with adults she developed precocious linguistic skills. Finally her father, who had continued to take an interest in his daughter's welfare, urged that she be sent to school, and, in 1892, she enrolled in the Virginia Seminary, an all-black academy in Lynchburg. At the time she used the last name Scales, her mother's maiden name.

A shy teenager, she began to turn to writing to express her inner thoughts. A superior student, she presented the valedictory speech to her graduating class in 1899, after receiving some help in her science courses from a fellow student and tutor, Edward Spencer. The two were married in 1901, and Edward Spencer's job as a postal worker allowed them an existence far more financially stable than many of their African-American contemporaries enjoyed. The couple's three children (the youngest, Chauncey, became a noted aviator) were raised with the assistance of domestic servants, and Spencer had time to devote to the development of her poetic craft--and also to the cultivation of a garden which would play an increasingly important role in her creative life.

Praised by James Weldon Johnson

Her poetry gained notice when one of the leading African-American intellectuals of the time, the writer James Weldon Johnson, came to Lynchburg in 1917 to establish a local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Johnson (who also suggested to this woman of many names that she call herself simply Anne Spencer) alerted the acerbic white essayist H.L. Mencken to her talent and about twenty of her poems were published between 1920 and 1930, many of them in anthologies edited by Johnson and others. Showing a characteristic sense of self, Spencer rejected attempts by Mencken and others to push her writing in new directions; she probably sacrificed wider recognition in order to obey her own inner creative impulses.

Those impulses led Spencer to create a poetic language unlike that of any of her contemporaries. Her poetry might be described as deceptively conventional. Outwardly there was little about it that was distinctively African-American: as noted above, Spencer avoided racial themes (except in the antilynching poem "White Things"). "I write about the things I love," she pointed out in the introduction to an anthology (quoted in American Women Writers). "But I have no civilized articulation for the things I hate." Nor did Spencer incorporate black diction or speech rhythms into her style.

Beneath the conventional surface, though, critics have found that Spencer's poetry embodied her inner life in strikingly original ways. Many of her works deal in some way with women's responses to their long subjugation ("It is dangerous for a woman to defy the gods," she wrote in "Letter to My Sister"), and the role that flowers and gardens play in her work prefigured a similar strain in the writings of Zora Neale Hurston and Alice Walker. Spencer has been compared with the white nineteenth-century American poet Emily Dickinson--a reclusive but pathbreaking figure who, like Spencer, used conventional language and domestic themes in ways that expanded their significance to a universal level.

Boycotted Local Public Transit

Spencer remained close to James Weldon Johnson until the latter's death in 1938, and her Lynchburg home was a frequent stopping-place for other African-American luminaries of the time, such as W.E.B. DuBois, Langston Hughes, and Paul Robeson. She herself became a solitary but effective civil-rights activist, boycotting Lynchburg's segregated public-transit system and demanding the hiring of black teachers in the city's black schools. In 1923, she applied for a job in Lynchburg's library system; under pressure owing to Spencer's growing recognition as a poet, administrators responded by establishing a branch library in all-black Dunbar High School (named after the poet Paul Lawrence Dunbar) and naming Spencer as its head. She remained in the post for twenty years, walking the two miles from her home every morning.

In later years, Spencer withdrew from the public eye. Deeply shaken by her husband's death in 1964, she suffered from ill health. She continued to write for her entire life, however, penning poetry, historical essays, and even part of a novel but not allowing any of it to be published. Restlessly creative for her entire life, she often wrote poems on whatever scraps of paper might be lying available at hand. When Spencer was hospitalized shortly before her death, many of these scraps were discarded by visitors unaware of their value, and the garden house where she did much of her writing was vandalized--with the result that of the hundreds of poems Spencer wrote, only a few dozen have ever been published in any form. Anne Spencer died on July 27, 1975, at the age of ninety-two.

Works

Selected poems

  • "Before the Feast of Shushan," 1920.
  • "Dunbar," 1920.
  • "White Things," 1923.
  • "Lady, Lady," 1925
  • "Lines to a Nasturtium," 1926.
  • "At the Carnival," 1927.
  • "Letter to My Sister," 1927.
  • "Rime for the Christmas Baby," 1927.
  • "Grapes: Still Life," 1929.
  • "Requiem," 1931.

Further Reading

Books

  • Benbow-Pfalzgraf, Taryn, ed., American Women Writers: A Critical Reference Guide, second ed., St. James Press, 2000.
  • Greene, J. Lee, Time's Unfading Garden: Anne Spencer's Life and Poetry, Louisiana State University Press, 1977.
  • Harris, Trudier, ed., Afro-American Writers from the Harlem Renaissance to 1940 (Dictionary of Literary Biography, volume 51), Gale, 1987.
  • Hine, Darlene Clark, ed., Black Women in America: A Historical Encyclopedia, Carlson Publishing, 1993.
  • Roses, Lorraine Elena, and Ruth Elizabeth Randolph, Harlem Renaissance and Beyond, G.K. Hall & Co., 1990.
  • Smith, Jessie Carney, ed., Notable Black American Women, Gale, 1992.

— James M. Manheim

Top
Anne Spencer

Anne Bethel Spencer in her wedding dress, 1900
Born Annie Bethel Bannister
(1882-02-06)February 6, 1882
Henry County, Virginia
Died July 27, 1975(1975-07-27)
Lynchburg, Virginia
Ethnicity Black
Alma mater Virginia Seminary
Genres poetry
Literary movement Harlem Renaissance
View of study, Anne Spencer House, Lynchburg, Virginia

Annie Bethel Spencer (better known as Anne Spencer) (February 6, 1882, Henry County, Virginia – July 27, 1975, Lynchburg, Virginia) was an American Black poet and active participant in the New Negro Movement and Harlem Renaissance period.

Anne was the first Virginian and first African-American to have her poetry included in the Norton Anthology of American Poetry. Also an activist for equality and educational opportunities for all, she hosted such dignitaries as Langston Hughes, Marian Anderson, George Washington Carver, Thurgood Marshall, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., James Weldon Johnson, and W. E. B. Du Bois.

Contents

Life

Childhood

The only child of Joel Cephus Bannister and Sarah Louise Scales, Anne Spencer was born Annie Bethel Bannister in Henry County, Virginia on February 6, 1882. Her parents separated while Annie was very young, and she moved with her mother to West Virginia, where she was placed under the care of William T. Dixie, a prominent member of the black community. Sarah noticed her daughter’s quick abilities with the English language and sent her to the Virginia Seminary, where she graduated in 1899. Also in this year, she met her husband, Charles Edward Spencer, whom she married on May 15, 1901[citation needed]. The celebrated Harlem Renaissance poet James Weldon Johnson helped to discover Annie’s talent as a poet, and also gave her the pen name of Anne Spencer[citation needed].[1]

Adulthood

From 1903 until her death in 1975, Anne Spencer lived and worked in a home at 1313 Pierce Street in Lynchburg, VA. As an adult, Anne's poetry grew in popularity and meaning. The Harlem Renaissance allowed her to meet people like herself, who inspired her poetry through their ideas and artwork and eventually led to her work being published. Johnson and De Bois were regular visitors at her house and would often spend the day in deep conversation discussing everything from art to politics. They all shared similar likes and dislikes and were all strong, independent thinkers. Anne became more and more involved in her local community and the NAACP. Although most of her poems remain reflections of her own ideas and thoughts, hints of influence from her work with the Harlem Renaissance began to show. Anne also tutored Ota Benga, a Congolese pygmy, in English during his stay in Lynchburg. Aside from her involvement in her community, Anne’s most important role was that of mother. Together, she and Edward lovingly raised their three children — Bethel, Alroy, and Chauncey Spencer.

Some of her letters are held at Yale University. She was included in the Norton Anthology of Literature by Women.

Anne Spencer House Museum and Garden

Anne Spencer lived and worked in a home on 1313 Pierce Street in Lynchburg, VA from 1903 until her death in 1975. The local chapter of the NAACP was founded from her home. A garden and a one-room retreat, where Anne did much of her writing, are also part of the property. Her papers are held at the Anne Spencer House, Lynchburg, VA.[2]

Works

Books

  • Times Unfading Garden: Anne Spencer’s Life and Poetry (1977).

Anthologies

Criticism

After its 1923 publication in the Crisis, "White Things" was never reprinted during her lifetime. Nevertheless, its impact was such that Keith Clark, in Notable Black American Women, referred to it as "the quintessential `protest' poem." [3]

References

External references

  • Shockley, Ann Allen, Afro-American Women Writers 1746-1933: An Anthology and Critical Guide, New Haven, Connecticut: Meridian Books, 1989. ISBN 0-452-00981-2
  • Anne Spencer House Museum and Garden [1] - African American Heritage of Virginia [2]
  • Spencer, Anne. Anne Spencer: Ah, how poets sing and die!. Ed. Nina V. Salmon. Lynchburg: Warwick House Publishing, 2001
  • Honey, Maureen, Shadowed Dreams: Women's Poetry of the Harlem Renaissance (Multi-Ethnic Literatures of the Americas), Rutgers; 2 Rev Exp edition (October 25, 2006). ISBN 0-8135-3886-6

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Lindbergh, Anne Spencer Morrow (American aviator and writer)
Dwight Whitney Morrow (American financier & statesman)
Anne Spencer (disambiguation)
Charles Augustus Lindbergh (1902–74, American aviator)
Lindbergh Kidnapping (legal term)