Boston Public Honors Legacy of African-American Literary Figure Samuel Allen Today
By: BWW News Desk Oct. 10, 2015
A public memorial celebration will be held today, October 10, at 2 p.m. ET. at the Museum of African American History, 46 Joy Street, Beacon Hill, Boston, MA to celebrate the life and legacy of Samuel Washington Allen - who also wrote under the pen name of Paul Vesey. The noted poet, professor, lawyer and translator passed away peacefully surrounded by family and friends at the age of 97 on June 27, 2015 in Norwood, Mass.
The memorial celebration will feature contributions from family members as well as fellow board member and Museum of African American History Executive Director Beverly Morgan-Welch; Whirlwind Magazine publisher, poet and protege Lamont Steptoe; Boston University Professor of African Studies Laurence Breiner, PhD and Langston Hughes Award recipient Everett Hoagland. Attendees are encouraged to RSVP by email - Samuel.Allen.Memorial@gmail.com - or phone / text - (617) 294-9889. Samuel Allen's collections of poetry consist of the bilingual Elfenbeinzahne (Heidelberg, 1956); Ivory Tusks (New York, 1968); Paul Vesey's Ledger (London, 1975) and Every Round (Detroit, 1987). He translated Sartre's "Orphee noir" essay in 1951 while in Paris and was the editor and one of the translators of Poems from Africa (Crowell, 1973). While majoring in sociology at Nashville's Fisk University, Allen studied writing with Harlem Renaissance poet, novelist and critic James Weldon Johnson. He graduated with high honors in 1938.Videos