(1902-1967)

Who Was Langston Hughes?

Langston Hughes published his first poem in 1921. He attended Columbia University, but left after one year to travel. A leading light of the Harlem Renaissance, Hughes published his first book in 1926. He went on to write countless works of poetry, prose and plays, as well as a popular column for the Chicago Defender.

Early Life

James Mercer Langston Hughes was born on February 1, 1902, in Joplin, Missouri. His parents, James Hughes and Carrie Langston, separated soon after his birth, and his father moved to Mexico.

While Hughes’ mother moved around during his youth, Hughes was raised primarily by his maternal grandmother, Mary, until she died in his early teens. From that point, he went to live with his mother, and they moved to several cities before eventually settling in Cleveland, Ohio.

It was during this time that Hughes first began to write poetry, and one of his teachers introduced him to the poetry of Carl Sandburg and Walt Whitman, both of whom Hughes would later cite as primary influences.

Hughes was also a regular contributor to his school’s literary magazine and frequently submitted to other poetry magazines, although they would ultimately reject his work.

Harlem Renaissance

Hughes graduated from high school in 1920 and spent the following year in Mexico with his father. Around this time, Hughes’ poem “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” was published in The Crisis magazine and was highly praised.

In 1921 Hughes returned to the United States and enrolled at Columbia University where he studied briefly, and during which time he quickly became a part of Harlem’s burgeoning cultural movement, what is commonly known as the Harlem Renaissance.

But Hughes dropped out of Columbia in 1922 and worked various odd jobs around New York for the following year, before signing on as a steward on a freighter that took him to Africa and Spain. He left the ship in 1924 and lived for a brief time in Paris, where he continued to develop and publish his poetry.

READ MORE: Langston Hughes’ Impact on the Harlem Renaissance

Poems and Other Works

‘The Weary Blues’

In November 1924, Hughes returned to the United States and worked various jobs. In 1925, he was working as a busboy in a Washington, D.C. hotel restaurant when he met American poet Vachel Lindsay. Hughes showed some of his poems to Lindsay, who was impressed enough to use his connections to promote Hughes’ poetry and ultimately bring it to a wider audience.

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In 1925, Hughes’ poem “The Weary Blues” won first prize in the Opportunity magazine literary competition, and Hughes also received a scholarship to attend Lincoln University, in Pennsylvania.

While studying at Lincoln, Hughes’ poetry came to the attention of novelist and critic Carl Van Vechten, who used his connections to help get Hughes’ first book of poetry, The Weary Blues, published by Knopf in 1926. The book had popular appeal and established both his poetic style and his commitment to Black themes and heritage.

Hughes was also among the first to use jazz rhythms and dialect to depict the life of urban Black people in his work. He published a second volume of poetry, Fine Clothes to the Jew, in 1927.

‘Not Without Laughter’

After his graduation from Lincoln in 1929, Hughes published his first novel, Not Without Laughter. The book was commercially successful enough to convince Hughes that he could make a living as a writer.

During the 1930s, Hughes would frequently travel the United States on lecture tours, and also abroad to the Soviet Union, Japan, and Haiti. He continued to write and publish poetry and prose during this time, and in 1934 he published his first collection of short stories, The Ways of White Folks.

‘Let America Be America Again’

In July 1936 he published one of his most celebrated poems, “Let America Be America Again” in Esquire, which examined the unrealized hopes and dreams of the country’s lower class and disadvantaged, expressing a sense of hope that the American Dream would one day arrive.

Hughes would later revise and republish “Let America Be America Again” in a small anthology of poems called A New Song.

In 1937, he served as a war correspondent for several American newspapers during the Spanish Civil War.

‘Simple’ & More

In 1940, Hughes’ autobiography up to age 28, The Big Sea, was published.

Also around this time, Hughes began contributing a column to the Chicago Defender, for which he created a comic character named Jesse B. Semple, better known as “Simple,” a Black Everyman that Hughes used to further explore urban, working-class Black themes, and to address racial issues. The columns were highly successful, and “Simple” would later be the focus of several of Hughes’ books and plays.

In the late 1940s, Hughes contributed the lyrics for a Broadway musical titled Street Scene, which featured music by Kurt Weill. The success of the musical would earn Hughes enough money that he was finally able to buy a house in Harlem. Around this time, he also taught creative writing at Atlanta University (today Clark Atlanta University) and was a guest lecturer at a university in Chicago for several months.

Over the next two decades, Hughes would continue his prolific output. In 1949 he wrote a play that inspired the opera Troubled Island and published yet another anthology of work, The Poetry of the Negro.

READ MORE: 10 of Langston Hughes’ Most Popular Poems

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‘A Dream Deferred’

In 1951 Hughes published one of his most celebrated poems,”Harlem (What happens to a dream deferred?’),” discussing how the American Dream falls short for African Americans:

What happens to a dream deferred?

Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
Like a syrupy sweet?

Maybe it just sags
Like a heavy load.

Or does it explode?

During the 1950s and 1960s, he published countless other works, including several books in his “Simple” series, English translations of the poetry of Federico García Lorca and Gabriela Mistral, another anthology of his own poetry, and the second installment of his autobiography, I Wonder as I Wander.

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Langston Hughes Fact Card

Sexuality

Literary scholars have debated Hughes’ sexuality for years, with many claiming the writer was gay and included a number of coded references to male lovers in his poems (as did Walt Whitman, a major influence on Hughes).

Hughes never married, nor was he romantically linked to any of the women in his life. And several of Hughes’ friends and traveling companions were known or believed to be gay, including Zell Ingram, Gilbert Price and Ferdinand Smith.

Other biographers have refuted these claims, but because of Hughes’ secrecy and the era’s homophobia surrounding openly gay men, there is no concrete evidence of Hughes’ sexuality.

Death and Legacy

On May 22, 1967, Hughes died from complications of prostate cancer. A tribute to his poetry, his funeral contained little in the way of spoken eulogy but was filled with jazz and blues music.

Hughes’ ashes were interred beneath the entrance of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem. The inscription marking the spot features a line from Hughes’ poem “The Negro Speaks of Rivers.” It reads: “My soul has grown deep like the rivers.”

Hughes’ Harlem home, on East 127th Street, received New York City Landmark status in 1981 and was added to the National Register of Places in 1982. Volumes of his work continue to be published and translated throughout the world.


QUICK FACTS

  • Name: Langston Hughes
  • Birth Year: 1902
  • Birth date: February 1, 1902
  • Birth State: Missouri
  • Birth City: Joplin
  • Birth Country: United States
  • Gender: Male
  • Best Known For: Langston Hughes was an African American writer whose poems, columns, novels and plays made him a leading figure in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s.
  • Industries
    • Fiction and Poetry
    • Theater and Dance
  • Astrological Sign: Aquarius
  • Schools
    • Lincoln University
    • Columbia University
  • Death Year: 1967
  • Death date: May 22, 1967
  • Death State: New York
  • Death City: New York
  • Death Country: United States

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CITATION INFORMATION

  • Article Title: Langston Hughes Biography
  • Author: Biography.com Editors
  • Website Name: The Biography.com website
  • Url: https://www.biography.com/authors-writers/langston-hughes
  • Access Date:
  • Publisher: A&E; Television Networks
  • Last Updated: January 29, 2021
  • Original Published Date: April 3, 2014

QUOTES

  • An artist must be free to choose what he does, certainly, but he must also never be afraid to do what he might choose.
  • I have discovered in life that there are ways of getting almost anywhere you want to go, if you really want to go.
  • We Negro writers, just by being Black, have been on the Blacklist all our lives. Censorship for us begins at the color line.
  • Humor is laughing at what you haven’t got when you ought to have it.
  • Let the rain kiss you. Let the rain beat upon your head with silver liquid drops. Let the rain sing you a lullaby.
  • The first two or three days, on the way home from school, little white kids, kids my age, 6 and 7 years old, who would throw stones at me. There were other little white kids, 6 and 7 years old, who picked up stones and threw them back at their fellow classmates, and defend me, and saw that I got home safely. So, I learned very early in life that our race problem is not really of Black against white, and white against Black. It’s a problem of people who are not very knowledgeable, or have small minds, or small spirits.
  • Negroes—sweet and docile, meek, humble and kind: Beware the day—they change their mind.
  • I swear to the Lord, I can’t see why democracy means everybody but me.
  • Like welcome summer rain, humor may suddenly cleanse and cool the earth, the air and you.
  • Negro blood is sure powerful, because just one drop of Black blood makes a colored man. One drop you are a Negro! …Black is powerful.
  • Hold fast to dreams, for if dreams die, life is a broken winged bird that cannot fly.
  • Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.
  • No woman can be handsome by the force of features alone, any more that she can be witty by only the help of speech.
  • Jessie Fauset at ‘The Crisis,’ Charles Johnson at ‘Opportunity’ and Alain Locke in Washington were the three people who midwifed the so-called ‘New Negro Literature’ into being. Kind and critical — but not too critical for the young — they nursed us along until our books were born.
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