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Nella Larsen was a novelist who found fame during the Harlem Renaissance. She was the first African-American woman to be awarded the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship. Larsen’s career was short-lived, however, but recent interest in her work has placed her in the conversation as one of the period’s most important voices.

Larsen was born Nellie Walker on April 13, 1891 in Chicago, Ill. to a white Danish mother and Black West Indian father. She was primarily raised in Chicago’s European immigrant community and didn’t have much contact or connection with Blacks from the Deep South.

When her mother married fellow Dutch native Peter Larsen, she was the only person of color in her mixed family. Some historians say that this early occurrence in Larsen’s life may have shaped some of her later writing.

It wasn’t until she entered Fisk University that she became exposed to Black people and their  struggles of the time. In 1914, she entered the nursing program at New York’s Lincoln Hospital, graduating in a year’s time. She then worked at the Tuskegee Institute, but the conditions weren’t favorable. She returned to New York and worked as a public health nurse for the city, mostly serving white patients.

In 1919, she married famed physics professor Elmer Imes, just the second black person to earn a Ph.D in physics. The pair moved to Harlem the next year and Larsen began writing a series of short stories. Because of Imes’ status in the community, Larsen was exposed to other Harlem Renaissance greats such as the NAACP’s Walter White, W.E.B. Du Bois and other related figures.

Little Known Black History Fact: Nella Larsen  was originally published on blackamericaweb.com

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