04/25/2026
Meet Vivian G. Harsh, the librarian of the Chicago Black Renaissance 📚
In 1909, a 19-year-old Vivian G. Harsh got a job as a junior clerk at her local library branch. This was the beginning of what would become a historic career at Chicago Public Library.
On Chicago’s South Side, residents waited decades for a local public library. When the George Cleveland Hall branch opened in the Bronzeville neighborhood in 1932, with Harsh at its helm, she became CPL's first Black branch manager.
Harsh saw the need for a dedicated archive that documented African American life in the U.S. Traveling throughout the American South, she collected rare books and manuscripts, sometimes using her own money to purchase materials for the branch.
By the late 1930s, word had spread that she was building a one-of-a-kind collection. Visual artists, writers, and activists of the Chicago Black Renaissance—a vibrant cultural and creative movement that emerged from the Great Migration—flocked to the library as a meeting spot.
Harsh gathered some of these influential voices, such as Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, Richard Wright, and Arna Bontemps, at her twice-monthly Book Review and Lecture Forum. Members of Chicago’s Bronzeville and nearby communities also took part in these discussions and readings.
Today, the Harsh Readers Circle continues to bring people together to read and discuss Black literature, celebrating its 40th anniversary season in 2026. The program conducts its meetings both in-person and virtually, inviting book lovers from across the globe to participate.
đź“· Hall Branch opening day, January 1932. Vivian Harsh, center. Source: Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection, George Cleveland Hall Branch Archives, Photo 084.