The Life of Paul Robeson

  • He was born

    He was born
    • Paul Robeson was born on April 9th, 1898 in Princeton, NJ
    • Youngest of 8 children
    • Son of a former slave turned preacher
    • He a attended Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ, playing football he was the 3rd African American to attend.
  • There's no Business, Like Show Business

    There's no Business, Like Show Business
    • Graduated from the Columbia University Law School in 1923 and took a job with a New York law firm. -Robeson's career as a lawyer ended suddenly when others within the firm turned on him because he was African American. -He then turned to acting as a career, his first act was a play called All God's Chillun Got Wings , he got the lead
  • All Around the World

    All Around the World
    • During the 1930's Robeson entertained throughtout Europe and the United States -In 1934 he spoke out against the Nazis who was Adolf's Hitler's radical German army
  • Power to "his own" people

    Power to "his own" people
    • Became chairman of the Council on African Affairs,which he helped establish in 1937
    • A spokesman for cultural black nationalism which was a a radical movement that called for African Americans to set up their own self-governing nation -Robeson also continued to fight racial discrimination that forced separation people based on race
  • Political Voice

    Political Voice
    • He sang to Loyalists troops during the Spainish Civil War (1936-39)
    • when battles erupted between Spain's traditionalists and reigning Second Spanish Republic
    • During World War II (1939–45), when the Allies—the United States, England, France, and the Soviet Union—battled German-led Axis forces -He supported the American effort by entertaining soldiers in camps and laborers in war industries.
  • Continues for Equality

    Continues for Equality
    -After the war, Robeson worked full-time campaigning for the rights of African Americans around the world
    -With a period of great paranoia within the nation, the American government and many citizens felt threatened
    -By Robeson's crusade for peace and on behalf of minorities
    - The fact that for over fifteen years he was America's most popular African American
    -Did not prevent Robeson from being banned from Americans concert and meeting halls and being denied a passport to travel overseas.
  • Finally...recognition!

    Finally...recognition!
    -During the 1950s Robeson performed in black churches and for trade unions
    -After eight years of denial, he won his passport
    -Gave a concert in Carnegie Hall, and published Here I Stand in 1958.
    - He went abroad on concert, television, and theater engagements
  • awards....awards.....and even more AWARDS!!

    awards....awards.....and even more AWARDS!!
    -National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's (NAACP)
    -Spingarn Medal
    - Several honorary degrees from colleges
    -Diction Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters
    - Numerous awards from labor unions and civic organizations
    Stalin Peace Prize
  • All Good Things Must Come to an End

    All Good Things Must Come to an End
    —Robeson returned to America in 1963 in poor health
    - Soon retired from public life.
    -Slowly deteriorating and living in seclusion
    -Robeson died on January 23, 1976, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
    -After suffering a stroke
  • Life after Death

    Life after Death
    • He was inducted posthumously after his death into the College Football Hall of Fame
    • At the new fourteen million dollar museum's grand opening in South Bend, Indiana -His songs, such as his trademark Ol' Man River, and acting have remained available in videos and new releases of his vintage recordings