As one other Girls’s Historical past month closes, it’s solely becoming for the AmNews, led by a dynamic girl, Elinor Tatum, to shine the highlight on an astonishing, however now obscure, girl journalist and editor from our previous. “It’s some of the vital issues that the brand new, New York Amsterdam Information Museum of Black Journalism will do,” mentioned scholar Dr. Ray Alexander-Minter. “They will have fun the good contributions of Black girls whilst they convey the enduring relevance of African People documenting the information from out of the shadows of oblivion, the place it was tried to bury it!”
Marvel Cooke, Thelma Berlack Boozer, Nora Holt, Evelyn Cunningham, Kathy Connors and others have all added to the Amsterdam Information’ luster. “However an important sister of all to work there, was Geraldyn ‘Gerri’ Hodges Dismond Main!” Insisted Dr. Minter.
Utilizing every of her married names, from 1939 to 1952 Dismond-Holland-Main served with distinction as a New York Amsterdam Information columnist and editor.
Throughout the Twenties-30s ‘Negro Renaissance interval,’ as a counterpart to Hollywood motion pictures extolling the glamorous escapades of Nick and Nora Charles, Harlem had the real-life hijinks of Geraldyn and Binga Dismond to gossip about. Seemingly, like Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald, they have been their period’s most dazzling couple, attending each worthwhile celebration and theater first evening on the calendar.
Geraldyn Hodges was born in Chicago in 1894, to Herbert and Mae Powell Hodges. As a result of her mom died throughout childbirth, her father mentioned it saddened him simply to take a look at her. Fortuitously, below the circumstances, she was adopted by her mom’s sister, her Aunt Maud Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. David Lawrence have been each not solely encouraging, however capable of provide their ward materials and social benefits like an introduction to the Southside’s Black elite at a debutante dance and (on scholarship) a university schooling.
Like so many ladies of her day, deciding to coach youngsters was seen as an appropriate pursuit. However she dreamed of doing extra. So it was that at simply 19, she launched a journalist profession, starting as a reporter for the Chicago Defender. The Midwest’s most famous Black newspaper, due to Chicago’s standing as a transportation hub and Pullman porters who noticed it as their obligation to flow into unbiased Black information all through the boondocks throughout their travels, its affect was even broader. This was an auspicious begin for a younger girl of colour.
Tall and good-looking Dr. H. (Henry) Binga Dismond, the son of a doctor, was born in 1891, in Virginia. He would graduate from Howard, becoming a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. His freshman 12 months, Dismond broke a 19-year monitor report and was subsequently chosen to compete in Berlin as a member of the 1916 U.S. Olympic staff. Though the video games have been cancelled, Dismond was awarded a gold medal anyway, for matching the American quarter mile report time of 47.2/5 seconds. Defeating the titleholder, he grew to become the western intercollegiate champion and earned his varsity letter. Urged by his banker-cousin Jesse Binga, he enrolled within the medical program on the College of Chicago. On completion of enlisting within the military, exhibiting valor acknowledged by the French authorities, Dismond left a embellished struggle hero. A person’s man, some have been shocked on the sensitivity of the poetry Dr. Dismond printed. Amongst different notables, he was to depend Langston Hughes as a pal and affected person.
In some way within the midst of this flurry of exercise, Dismond discovered time to marry after which to shortly divorce. All through his life, the soon-to-be physician appears all the time to have discovered time for female companionship. His first spouse had been a instructor too. However she was nothing like Gerri Hodges, who whereas a college scholar, was one among 5 founding members of an undergraduate chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.
This golden couple who met whereas finding out at the College of Chicago, made headlines once they wed on the Texas military base the place Dismond skilled. Geraldyn Dismond was obliged to show college for a short while. With the declaration of World Conflict I, she joined the Pink Cross as a nurse, rising to the rank of main. A couple of years after struggle’s finish, in 1923, they migrated to New York for higher alternatives. The Dismonds first lived on one hundred and thirty fifth Avenue, the backbone of “America’s Black Cultural Capital.” Their constructing, subsequent door to the thirty second police precinct headquarters, unlandmarked, nonetheless stands. A short while after their arrival, they have been joined by novelist Nella Larsen and her physicist professor husband Elmer S. Imes. The {couples} grew to become quick pals. Nonetheless, close by Strivers Row beckoned.
Alongside Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard, 138th and 139th Streets to Frederick Douglas Boulevard, are the 160 homes and 4 condominium buildings that David King in-built 1893 because the “King Mannequin Homes.” They have been meant to point out how elegant housing ought to finest be deliberate. A number of architects participated, however they have been guided by New York’s foremost designer of the Edwardian period, Stanford White. Stately and stylish, these buildings have all the time stood in excessive regard. A century in the past, the most important homes going through busy Seventh Avenue (Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard), have been the developments most fascinating properties. Not one is now nonetheless a non-public home for one household attended by a workers of full-time, live-in servants. Against this, the residences alongside Eighth Avenue, unsought after due to the irritation of the elevated practice going by, revamped with fashionable items with each amenity and no extra elevated practice, have change into way more than buildings meant to display noise. Nearer to Frederick Douglass Boulevard’s thriving restaurant row, they’ve change into Strivers’ Row’s gateway to the great life, which is extra simply attainable in Harlem than in another a part of Manhattan. The identify Strivers’ Row was as soon as utilized by Blacks lastly allowed to dwell within the King Homes in 1918, to poke enjoyable on the fortunate few capable of scrape collectively sufficient to purchase right here. Surviving as an unique enclave even after the Nice Melancholy, in 1938, proposed to be leveled by the town and changed by a center class housing mission, the row was severely threatened. Solely the united opposition of Black politics and political bosses, led by the Amsterdam Information and different stalwarts of the Black press, saved it from destruction. Presenting planning tsar Robert Moses with an unprecedented defeat, it additionally scored one of many nation’s nascent, nonetheless largely neglected, historic preservation victories!
It was uncommon within the roaring twenties for many center class girls to work, however the Dismonds wished one of the best of the whole lot. They arrived in New York lower than a decade after homes in Strivers’ Row first grew to become out there to African People. Buying the house of light-weight champion boxer Harry Wills, they grew to become among the many space’s most notable residents. In contrast to different well-to-do Harlemites who owned homes, however took in roomers, partaking their neighbor, architect Vertner Tandy, the Dismonds transformed their home right into a mixed-use facility. Dr. Dismond’s medical observe occupied the bottom flooring. With the assistance of modern inside designer Harold Curtis Brown, the primary ‘first’ or ‘Parlor’ flooring was made into the couple’s condominium, replete with leaded casement home windows. The highest-two flooring have been dedicated to income-producing “effectivity” residences. Fashionable, well-equipped and updated, they have been all the time a lot wanted.
Geraldyn Dismond reported on the Harlem social and inventive scene in The Inter-State Tattler. It was an excellent Black journal with subscribers nationwide, a mixture of City and Nation, Fortune, and Vainness Honest. Maintaining a fast-paced social life, Dismond was all the time cautious to doc herself and her mate on the shindigs she lined. She was ‘Woman Nicotine’ and he, ‘The Evening Hawk.’ As standard in Greenwich Village as they have been uptown, the Dismonds have been a part of a social motion of whites and Blacks who loved every others’ firm in defiance of conference.

Any New York customer and plenty of outstanding downtown residents like Cary Grant, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, and Barbara Hutton, flocked to Harlem after seeing Eubie Blake’s hit Broadway musical, “Shuffle Alongside.” A a lot bigger variety of folks unfamiliar with Harlem, discovered all about its particular charms, studying what Geraldyn Dismond wrote. The next traces appeared in 1929:
“The best pleasure in life is to have the ability to specific one’s internal self. The second best pleasure is to have the ability to mingle with one’s variety. The third best pleasure is to obtain the plaudits of 1’s fellows. And thereby hangs the success of the Hamilton Lodge dances which for sixty-one years have thrilled and entertained essentially the most blasé of New York … robes of all descriptions, jewels, feathers and wonder past phrases. However above and over all, a spirit of abandon, hilarity and camaraderie that fired the creativeness and made for a real fiesta. After all, a fancy dress ball generally is a very tame factor, however when all of the exquisitely gowned girls on the ground are males and quite a few the neatest males are girls, ah then, we’ve got one thing over which to thrill and develop round-eyed … By no means no wells of loneliness in Harlem…”
Apart from writing a column within the Tattler, Dismond additionally served because the journal’s managing editor. Along with this, she wrote for the Amsterdam Information, The Pittsburgh Courier, and different African-American weekly newspapers. She was additionally a radio announcer and the primary African-American girl to host her personal common program. “The Negro Achievement Hour,” broadcast on WABC, later appeared on different space stations. Childless, as a journalist, editor, newscaster, publicist, public well being official, creator, and group chief, Dismond’s life by no means lacked for pleasure.
A devoted trend plate, Dismond preferred to patronize artistic younger Black designers like milliner Willard Winter and couturier Stefan Younger, aka ‘Stefan’! A private trend assertion that introduced her strategy with each step, was a golden attraction bracelet with numerous miniature charms that documented her love of world journey.
Dismond, who unloaded her philandering first husband in 1933, simply earlier than he married one among their pals and tenants, married twice extra. Interviewed by David Levering Lewis for his groundbreaking ebook, “When Harlem was in Vogue,” indicative of among the techniques she should have employed to nail a narrative, she requested, “How a lot do you pay?” She additionally confessed, “If solely I’d traveled to West Africa the place males observe polygamy, earlier than marrying my first husband, I’d have understood him higher.”
Nuptials with New Jersey mortician John Richard Main, her third and remaining husband, came about in Buenos Aires simply after World Conflict ll. Assuming her husband’s surname (which she additionally had whereas married to Stirling Holland) was how she grew to become Gerri Main.
Disaffected by America’s political events, as early as 1928 she declared within the Pittsburgh Courier: “I don’t see how any clever, self-respecting Negro can help both [party]…” Each have been condemned for upholding, “the practices of Jim-Crowism, disenfranchisement, and race discrimination by which Negroes are degraded and oppressed.” So for a time Main admired American communism. In the end nevertheless, because the nation’s bicentennial approached, she would revert to Democratic activism.
Main remained an inveterate reporter all her life. Society editor for the nonetheless printed Ebony and Jet magazines, she lined the whole lot from the coronation of Queen Elizabeth ll, to the energetic love lifetime of Eartha Kitt. In 1977, she wrote a nostalgic illustrated ebook with Doris E. Saunders that naturally included her family, “Black Society.” In 1984, Main died in Harlem.



















