An Online Reference Guide to African American History
Quintard Taylor
Scott and Dorothy Bullitt Professor of American History
University of Washington, Seattle
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Taylor Emmanuel Gordon was born in 1893 in White Sulphur Springs, Montana, one of six children of a cook and a laundress. He is best known for his career as a singer in the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s. After leaving Montana in 1910 for a job in Minnesota, Gordon eventually made his way to New York. There he joined a vaudeville act called “The Inimitable Five,” and toured coast to coast. As the Harlem Renaissance gathered steam in the mid-1920s, he found more opportunities to advance his singing career. The most important of these was a partnership with J. Rosamond Johnson, who with his brother James Weldon Johnson composed “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” and compiled the classic Book of American Negro Spirituals. Gordon joined Rosamond Johnson as a singing partner and the pair quickly achieved fame, touring the United States, France and England. In 1927 they gave an acclaimed concert at Carnegie Hall sponsored by the Urban League. W.E.B. Du Bois claimed that “No one who has heard Johnson and Gordon sing ‘Stand Still Jordan’ can ever forget its spell.” Sources:
Taylor Gordon, Born to Be, With a New Introduction by Robert Hemenway (University of Washington Press, 1975).
Contributor(s):
Behan Barbara C.
Independent Historian
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