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American journalist
Noah Davis Thompson (died 1933) was an American writer, editor, publisher, and Civil Rights leader in the United States.
[1]
[2]
Personal life
His first wife died as a result of complications related to the birth of their son.
[1] A few years later he married writer
Eloise Bibb Thompson .
[3] They married in Chicago in 1911
[4] and moved to Los Angeles.
[5]
C. Bernard Thompson was his brother.
After his second wife died, he married Hattie Upton and they lived in the
Dunbar Garden Apartments .
[1]
He was a
Catholic .
[6]
References
^
a
b
c
"March 1933 Noah D Thompson obit" . The New York Age . 25 March 1933. p. 1.
^ Garvey, Marcus; Hill, Robert A. (November 19, 1984).
The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, Vol. III: September 1920-August 1921 . University of California Press.
ISBN
9780520052574 – via Google Books.
^ Allmendinger, Blake (May 19, 2015).
A History of California Literature . Cambridge University Press.
ISBN
9781316299074 – via Google Books.
^ Peterson, Bernard L. (May 4, 1990).
Early Black American Playwrights and Dramatic Writers: A Biographical Directory and Catalog of Plays, Films, and Broadcasting Scripts . Greenwood Publishing Group.
ISBN
9780313266218 – via Google Books.
^ Knopf-Newman, Marcy Jane (May 4, 1993).
The Sleeper Wakes: Harlem Renaissance Stories by Women . Rutgers University Press. p.
272 – via Internet Archive. noah davis thompson.
^ Aberjhani (2003).
Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance . Sandra L. West. New York: Facts On File, Inc.
ISBN
978-1-4381-3017-0 .
OCLC
642206211 .