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Arturo (Arthur) Alfonso
Schomburg (1874-1938)
bibliophile, historian,
writer, collector, curator
Arturo Alfonso Schomburg was born in Puerto Rico
on January 24, 1874. He began his education in a primary school in San Juan,
where he studied reading, penmanship, sacred history, church history, arithmetic,
Spanish grammar, history, agriculture and commerce. Arturo's fifth-grade
teacher is said to have told him that "Black people have no history, no
heroes, no great moments." Because of this and his participation in a history
club, Schomburg developed a thirst for knowledge about people of African
descent and began his lifelong quest studying the history and collecting
the books and artifacts that made up the core of his unique and extensive
library.
He came to New York in April 1891 and lived on the
Lower East Side. He was involved in the revolutionary movements of the
immigrant Cubans and Puerto Ricans living in that area, regularly attending
meetings and working at odd jobs while attending night school at Manhattan
Central High School. Schomburg became a Mason and met bibliophile and
journalist John Edward Bruce. "Bruce Grit" introduced Schomburg to the
African-American intellectual community and encouraged him to write about
African world history and continue to increase his knowledge.
Arturo Schomburg would look everywhere for books
by and about African people. He also collected letters, manuscripts, prints,
playbills and paintings. He was especially proud of his collection of
Benjamin Banneker's Almanacs . In fact, his library contained
many rare and unusual items from all over the world. The history of the
Caribbean and Latin America and the lives of heroic people in that region
was also an area of special interest to Schomburg. And he actively sought
any material relative to that subject.
Schomburg's collection became the cornerstone of The New York Public Library's
Division of Negro Literature, History, and Prints. He frequently loaned
objects from his personal library to the 135th Street Branch of The New
York Public Library, which was a center of intellectual and cultural activity
in Harlem. In 1926 his collection of 10,000 items was purchased by the
Library with the assistance of the Carnegie Corporation. He was later
invited to be the curator of the new division which included his collections.
He became involved in the social and literary movement that started in
Harlem, known as the "Harlem Renaissance." which spread to African-American
communities throughout the country. Schomburg fully shared his knowledge
of the history of peoples of African descent with the young scholars and
writers of the New Negro movement. One of his primary motivations was
to combat racial prejudice by providing proof of the extraordinary contributions
of peoples of African descent to world history. Schomburg wrote, "I depart
now on a mission of love to recapture my lost heritage."
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