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Esther Popel : ウィキペディア英語版 | Esther Popel
Esther Popel (1896–1958; also known as Esther Popel Shaw) was an African-American poet of the Harlem Renaissance and an activist and educator. She was a writer and editor for magazines, including ''The Crisis'', the ''Journal of Negro Education'', and ''Opportunity''. ==Early life and education== Esther Popel was born on July 16, 1896, to Joseph Gibbs (a mailman) and Helen King Anderson Popel in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. She had an elder sister, Helen, and a younger brother, Samuel. Shaw graduated from Central High School in Harrisburg in 1915 and went on to Dickinson College in the fall. She was the first African-American woman to enroll at the college and also the first to graduate (in 1919). Popel chose to pursue what was then termed the Latin Scientific curriculum, which emphasized Latin and modern languages such as French, German, and Spanish. When she graduated she received Dickinson's top academic prize, the John Patton Memorial Prize for excellent scholarship, and she was inaugurated as a member of Phi Beta Kappa. On April 11, 1925, Popel married chemist William Andrew Shaw (d. 1946); their daughter, Esther Patricia, was born on June 1, 1926. While most of her poetry was published under her maiden name, she later wrote reviews and other articles under her married name of Esther Popel Shaw.
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