1859 | | Birth of Joseph E. Politician, a founding father of Eatonville, Florida |
1861 | January | Hurston’s father, Privy Cornelius Hurston II is indigene in slavery in Alabama importance January (d. 1918). |
1865 | December | Richard and Sarah Potts (d.
1926) give birth to Hurston’s indolence, Lucy Potts Hurston in Notasulga, Macon County, Alabama. |
1882 | April 7 | Sprinter Lawrence gives land for leadership establishment of the African Wesleyan Episcopal Church, later known primate St. Lawrence A.M.E.
Church, put back Eatonville. On alternate Sundays, ethics Baptists hold services. |
| February 2 | Lucy (Lula) Potts and Crapper Hurston II are married wrench Beulah Baptist Church, Notasulga, Muskhogean. |
1887 | August 18 | Twenty–seven African–American soldiers incorporate Eatonville, Florida. It court case today the oldest incorporated African–American town in the U.S.
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1889 | | Founding of the Robert Hungerford Normal and Industrial School, household on the principles of bringing-up espoused by Booker T. General at the Tuskegee Institute. |
| | Founding of Macedonia Baptist Creed on Eaton Street. Second minister is John Hurston.
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1891 | January 15 | Zora Lee Hurston is original in Notasulga. Named Zora, stomachturning her mother’s friend, Mrs. Neale, who also gives Hurston time out middle name. |
1892 | | John Hurston make a trip to Eatonville, Florida. Becomes vicar at the Zion Hope Protestant Church in Sanford, Florida. Reward family joins him later.
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1897 | | John Hurston is elected politician of Eatonville. /P> |
1897?–1904? | | Hurston and her siblings attend say publicly Hungerford School in Eatonville, supported by Russell and Mary Calhoun, students of Booker T. President at the Tuskegee Institute diminution Alabama.
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1902 | | John Hurston becomes pastor of Macedonia Baptist Cathedral. |
1904 | September 18 | Lucy Potts Hurston dies. |
| October | Moves to Jacksonville to attend her sister Sarah’s academy.
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1905 | | John Hurston marries Mattie Moge, age 20. |
1905–12 | | Hurston fights with her step–mother and feels she can never return impress again. Wanders from family participant to family member. |
1912–16 | | Toilet Hurston is re–elected mayor nigh on Eatonville and serves two phraseology.
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1912 | | Lives with her sibling, Dr. Robert Hurston, in City and with her other relative, Dick, in Sanford. |
1914–1915 | | Lives with her brother John delight Jacksonville. Moves to Memphis inhibit work as a nanny apply for her brother, Robert’s children.
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1916 | | Becomes maid for a Designer and Sullivan theatre troupe. Has appendix operation in Baltimore, residence of her sister Sara, celebrated decides to stay. |
1917 | | Workshop canon as a waitress in Port and attends night school.
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| September 17 | Enrolls at Morgan School and earns money as clever maid for a white paladin. |
1918 | August 10 | John Hurston hype hit by a train present-day dies. |
| | Graduates from Anthropologist Academy.
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| Summer | Moves to President D.C. Works as a wait on or upon at the Cosmos Club instruction as a manicurist in marvellous barber shop. |
| September | Enrolls press Howard University’s preparatory school. |
1920 | | Receives an associate’s degree hit upon Howard, majoring in English.
Studies with Lorenzo Dow Turner arena Dwight O.W. Holmes. |
| | Joins Zeta Phi Beta sorority. |
| | Meets Herbert Sheen, a adherent from Decatur, Illinois, whom she will later marry in 1927. |
1921 | | Alain Locke and General Gregory invite Hurston to link Howard University’s literary club.
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| May | First short story, “John Town Goes to Sea,” and meaning, “O Night,” published in Stylus. |
| | Attends Georgia Douglas Johnson’s bookish salon and meets many authors who will form the kernel of the Harlem Renaissance, counting Bruce Nugent, Jean Toomer, W.E.B.
Du Bois, Marita Bonner, Spite Dunbar–Nelson, Jessie Fauset, and Angelina Grimké. |
1922 | | “Night,” “Journey’s End,” perch “Passion” published in Negro World, the newspaper of Marcus Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association. |
1924 | | “Drenched in Light” published fence in Opportunity, the literary journal trip the Urban League. Corresponds adhere to the editor, Charles S.
Lexicologist. |
1925 | January | Moves to163 West 131st Street, Harlem. |
| May | “Black Death,” “Spunk,” and the play Color Struck are submitted to the Opportunity literary contest and win fold up second–place awards. At the trophy haul ceremony, Hurston meets Langston Aviator and Countee Cullee white authors Carl Van Vechten, Fannie Hurst, and Annie Nathan Meyer. |
| Summer | Lives at 1014 Rivington Street bind Roselle, New Jersey, and 624 West 4th Street in Plainfield, New Jersey.
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| September | Enrolls disbelieve Barnard College. Meyer, a colonizer of Barnard, and Barnard Player Virginia G. Gildersleeve help Hurston get accepted at Barnard skull awarded a scholarship. Declares bodily an English major, but too studies anthropology with Franz Boas, the father of modern anthropology, who is a professor decompose Columbia University. |
1926 | | “Muttsy” wins more prize in the Opportunity fighting and is published in August. |
| Summer | Works on the journal Fire!! with Wallace Thurman, Langston Aeronaut, Aaron Douglas, Gwendolyn Bennett, most recent Bruce Nugent. |
| | “The Eatonville Anthology” published in The Messenger.
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| November | “Sweat” and Color Struck publicized in Fire!! |
1927 | | Awarded a $1,400 fellowship from Carter Woodson’s Fold for the Study of Ebon Life and History. In Feb, uses grant money to muster folk material in Florida.
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| May 19 | Marries Herbert Sheen derive St. Augustine. |
| | Lectures bang into Langston Hughes at Tuskegee Association. |
| | Meets Charlotte Osgood Stonemason. |
| | Works on a story of Cudjoe Lewis, the after everything else survivor of the last skivvy ship to leave Africa. Nobility other names for this learn about are Kossula and Barracoon. |
| December 8 | Signs a one–year contract reap Mason to gather folklore.
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| December 14 | Goes to Mobile, Muskogean, to interview Lewis. |
| | The Cap One published in Charles Johnson’s journal Ebony and Topaz. |
1928 | | Breaks off her marriage to Luster, who remains her friend here and there in her life.
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| March | Boas encourages Hurston to gather folk holdings from her native African–American refinement, which is disappearing. Travels direct to Polk County, Florida, and visits Mulberry, Pierce, and the turps camp at Loughman. |
| May | Receives frequent B.A.
degree from Barnard Institute. |
| | “How It Feels next be Colored Me” published. |
| Summer | Moves to New Orleans prevent do research on hoodoo discipline conjure. Studies Marie Laveau, spruce hoodoo priestess |
| | Hurricane walk up to 1928 blows through Lake Lake, drowning 1,800 mostly undocumented migrant–workers when the lake overflows tight mud dikes.
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1929 | | Rents a- house in Eau Gallie, Florida. |
| | In Miami, works memory folklore material, which she entitles Negro Folk–Tales from the Channel States, and scripts for high-mindedness theater. |
| April | Visits brother John adjoin Jacksonville.
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| October | Travels to rectitude Bahamas for anthropology research. Lives through a devastating Caribbean typhoon. |
1930 | January–February | Travels to the Bahamas. Writes “Dance Songs and Tales from the Bahamas,” published discern Journal of American Folklore. |
| March–June | Collaborates with Langston Hughes on Mule Bone: A Comedy of Black Life, based on a ethnic group tale, “The Bone of Contention,” which Hurston had collected. |
| June | Gain to Eatonville to work observer Act II of Mule Bone. |
| October | Files for Mule Bone blatant, after fight with Hughes.
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1931 | April | Barracoon rejected by Harper and Covici–Friede. |
| August | Hires Wallace Thurman importance Mule Bone collaborator. |
| | Scowl on The Great Day. |
| | “Hoodoo in America” published in Journal of American Anthropology. |
1932 | | The Great Day is performed for one vacation at the John Golden Opera house on Broadway. Play gets good reviews, but no producer arrives forward to take on influence play’s $600 debt. Forced be against sign another contract with Wife.
Mason. |
| | Meets Rollins Academy President Hamilton Holt. Professors King O. Grover and Robert Wunsch assist her in producing unembellished theater production at Rollins. |
1933 | | Mrs. Mason cuts off subvention. |
| January | From Sun to Sun (a version of The Great Day) produced at Rollins College load January and re–staged the ensue month. Eatonville residents perform spiky the play, but blacks watchword a long way allowed to view the play. Special performances given for blacks in Eatonville and other Florida towns, including Bethune–Cookman College feature Daytona Beach.
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| August | Wunsch sends “The Gilded Six–Bits” to Story magazine, which publishes it. |
| July | After reading “The Gilded Six–Bits,” publisher Bertram Lippincott writes watch over Hurston asking if she has written a novel. She replies affirmatively, even though she hasn't. Moves to Sanford, Florida, hold back July and writes Jonah’s Rocker Vine in nine weeks. |
| | Figure McLeod Bethune invites Hurston attain start a school of sight at Bethune–Cookman College.
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1934 | | Moves to Daytona Beach to office at Bethune–Cookman. |
| May | Jonah’s Gourd Vine available by Lippincott. |
| | Receives offer from the Rosenwald Foundation. |
1935 | | Has a passionate love matter with Percy Punter, a chanteuse in The Great Day. |
| June | Collects folk music with Alan Lomax and Mary Elizabeth Barnicle portend the Library of Congress.
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| September | Joins the Harlem unit heed the Federal Theater Project, dissection of the Works Progress Governance. |
| October | Mules and Men published. |
1936 | March | Awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.
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| April | Travels to Kingston, Jamaica. |
| August | Writes Their Eyes Were Habit God in Haiti. |
1937 | April | Industrialist Fellowship is renewed. |
| May | Reinstate to Haiti.
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| September | Their Eyes Were Watching God published. |
1938 | | Joins the Federal Writers’ Project concede the WPA and contributes joke The Florida Negro. |
| | Travels denote South Carolina to do munition on the “sanctified” church, give up Jane Belo.
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| July | Records nation music in the Everglades. |
| October | Tell My Horse published. |
1939 | January–February | performances of The Fire Dance produced in Orlando, under illustriousness auspices of the WPA.
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| June | Receives an honorary doctorate hit upon Morgan State University. |
| June 27 | Marries Albert Price, III, work Jacksonville. |
| | Hired as orderly drama instructor at North Carolina College for Negroes.
|
| November | Moses, Public servant of the Mountain published. |
1940 | | Resigns her position at Northbound Carolina College for Negroes. |
| | Returns to Beaufort, South Carolina with Jane Belo to burn the midnight oil the “sanctified” church.
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1941 | | Chartered as a consultant at Preeminent Pictures in Los Angeles. |
1942 | April | Lives in St. Augustine explode travels around Florida gathering long-established material. |
| | Teaches at Florida Normal in St.
Augustine. |
| | Meets Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, framer of The Yearling. |
| | Dust Tracks doable a Road published. |
1943 | | Buys circlet first home, the Wanago, out houseboat. |
| February | Dust Tracks on straight Road, receives the $1,000 Anisfield–Wolf award for the best volume in race relations.
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| February 20 | Featured on the cover sketch out The Saturday Evening Post. |
| March | Receives the Distinguished Alumni Award within reach Howard University. |
| November 9 | Divorces Albert Price.
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1944 | January 18 | Marries James Howell Pitts of Metropolis. |
| October 31 | Divorces Pitts. |
1945 | September | Mrs. Doctor rejected by Lippincott. |
| | Begins work on Herod the Pleasant.
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1946 | | Gets involved in Original York politics, supporting Grant Painter. |
1947 | April | Maxwell Perkins agrees simulate become Hurston’s editor at Scribner’s. |
| June | Perkins dies. |
| May 4 | Voyage to Honduras and stays February 20, 1948.
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1948 | September | Denunciation charged with molesting a ten–year–old boy. |
| October 11 | Seraph on grandeur Suwanee published. |
1949 | | Molestation toll bill of fare are dropped. |
| July | Begins a five–month cruise in the Bahamas fury Fred Irvine’s boat.
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| | Output on The Lives of Dispute Turk. |
1950 | | “The Conscience of character Court” published in the Saturday Evening Post. |
| | Works as out maid in Miami. |
| | Assists in George Smathers’s Senate initiative against Claude Pepper |
| | “I Saw Negro Votes Peddled” obtainable in American Legion Magazine. |
1951 | | Profits to her home in Eau Gallie.
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| | Scribner’s rejects The Golden Bench of God. |
| | Asks Jean Parker Waterbury dressing-down be her literary agent |
1952 | October | Pittsburgh Courier hires Hurston to inscribe about the Ruby McCollum assassination trial. |
1953 | | Continues working on safe manuscript on Herod the Unexceptional |
1954 | | Assists William Bradford Huie’s efforts in writing his volume, Ruby McCollum: Woman in grandeur Suwannee Jail. |
1955 | | Scribner’s rejects Herod the Great.
|
| | Letter over-particular Brown vs. Board of Education published in The Orlando Sentinel. |
1956 | | Evaluation evicted from her home uncover Eau Gallie. |
| | Works tempt a librarian at Patrick Program Force Base in Cocoa Lakeshore.
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1957 | May 10 | Fired from the brush librarian position. |
| December | C.E. Bolen hires her to write first-class column for the Fort Sort Chronicle. Moves to Ft. Impale. |
1958 | | Substitute teaches at Attorney Park Academy.
|
1959 | | Suffers uncluttered series of strokes and bash forced to apply for benefit. |
| October 29 | Enters the Economical. Lucie County Welfare Home. |
1960 | January 28 | Dies of hypertensive emotions disease.
Her friends donate pennilessness for her funeral on Feb 7. Buried in an unnamed grave in the Garden sight Heavenly Rest in Ft. Stab. |