Gwendolyn Brooks was born in 1917. She was first reared in Topeka, Kansas and at the age of six, she soon moved to Chicago. The main reason why her family moved was because of the Great Migration. Many African Americans were beaten or discriminated for being the color of their skin. The Great Migration relocated anyone who decided …show more content…
She progressed in her poetry in a brisk number of years. By the age of sixteen, she published over seventy poems and soon began to submit her work to a well-known African-American newspaper called the Chicago Defender. However, Brooks was a secretary along with organizing many poetry workshops. In fact, having a large part in writing made Gwendolyn increase her skills in poetry. Brooks soon began to write her first poetry book called A Street in Bronzeville. Four years later, in 1949, she finished her second poetry book named Annie Allen. By this time Brooks received a numerous of awards, but her greatest accomplishment was winning the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. In the midst of all her accomplishments, Brooks married Henry Lowington Blakely in 1939. One year later the newly wedded couple gave birth to their first child Henry Jr. Their second child Nora was later born in 1951. Before Gwendolyn passed away from cancer she drew her poetry career to an end with over twenty popular poems and poetry