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Regina Anderson Andrews

Educator
Harlem Renaissance
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      Andrews (1901-1993) was a Harlem It Girl, Librarian, Hostess, and Cultural Icon. She helped organize the Civic Club Dinner of 1924 - the purported birthplace of the Harlem Renaissance - and she became the first Black librarian appointed to lead a New York Public Library branch (115th St. Branch, 1938).

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Attributions
Attributions
Attributions
Image 3: Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Photographs and Prints Division, The New York Public Library. (1925). Guests at breakfast party for Langston Hughes hosted by Regina Anderson (Andrews) and Ethel Ray at 580 St. Nicholas Avenue, Harlem, May 1925. Back row, left to right: Ethel Ray (Nance), Langston Hughes, Helen Lanning,Pearl Fisher, Rudolf Fisher, Luella Tucker, Clarissa Scott, Hubert Delany. Front row, left to right: Regina Anderson (Andrews), Esther Popel, Jessie Fauser, Marie Johnson and E. Franklin Frazier. Retrieved from https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/61a1b0dc-be1b-3d13-e040-e00a18064b60
Birth
May 21, 1901, Chicago, Illinois
Death
February 5, 1993, Ossining, New York
Resting Place
Language(s)
Spouse(s)

William T. Andrews, Jr.

Partner(s)
Relatives
Associate(s)
Alma Mater
Influenced
Influenced By
Did You Know?
Colleague(s)
Collaborator(s)

➤W.E.B. Dubois (Krigwa Players)

➤Rose McClendon and Dorothy Randolph Peterson

(Negro Experimental Theatre/Harlem Experimental Theatre)

➤Ethel Ray Nance

(Chronology of African-Americans in New York, 1621-1966)

Children
Awards & Honors
Parents
Occupation
Librarian, New York Public Library - 135th St. branch (1923); and 115th St. branch (1938) - Branch Librarian
Certification(s)
License(s)
Education
Wilberforce University, Columbia University (Master of Library Science)
Organization(s)

・Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.,

・Krigwa Players (1925),

・Negro Experimental Theatre/Harlem Experimental Theatre (1929)

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Appointment(s)
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Website
*some sources say April 6, 1845

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