Louise Alone Thompson Patterson | |
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Patterson 1960 in Berlin
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Born |
Louise Alone Thompson September 9, 1901 Chicago, Illinois |
Died | August 27, 1999 Amsterdam Nursing Home New York City |
(aged 97)
Known for | Harlem Renaissance |
Spouse(s) |
Wallace Thurman William L. Patterson |
Louise Alone Thompson Patterson (September 9, 1901 – August 27, 1999) was an American social activist and college professor.
Born in Chicago, Illinois, Patterson became a professor at the renowned Hampton Institute, a historically black college (HBCU) in Virginia by age twenty-two. She worked there for five years.
She moved to New York to the burgeoning artistic community in Harlem. When she first went to New York, she pursued social work, but eventually became a central figure in the literary movement. She had a short marriage to the writer Wallace Thurman, who she said was gay but refused to acknowledge it.
Though Thompson organized a number of protests and opened one of the premiere Harlem salons, she became best known for her close friendship with the author Langston Hughes. Both admired the Soviet system of government and organized a group of twenty-two Harlem writers, artists, and intellectuals to create a film about discrimination in the United States for a Soviet film company. After the project fell through due to lack of funding, Thompson and Hughes returned to the United States to found the Harlem Suitcase Theater, which presented plays written by Hughes and other black writers and featured all-black casts.
For the remainder of her life, Patterson continued to be active in political and social issues.
Thompson married Thurman in August 1928 but their marriage broke up six months later when she discovered that he was homosexual.
She later married William L. Patterson, a prominent member of the American Communist Party.
She joined her husband in protesting the anti-Communist policies of Senator Joseph McCarthy in the 1950s. In the 1960s, she was involved in the Civil Rights Movement, though by that time her influence was greatly overshadowed by more notable figures.