The Architect of Memory: How Arturo Alfonso Schomburg Built Harlem’s Most Powerful Act of Resistance
At the crossroads of Malcolm X Boulevard and 135th Street stands one of the most consequential intellectual institutions in the world. The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture is not simply a library, nor merely an archive. It is a declaration — that Black history exists, that it matters, and that remembering is itself a revolutionary act. As the Schomburg Center marks its centennial season in 2025–2026, Harlem is not just celebrating an anniversary. It is honoring a philosophy that continues to safeguard the past while shaping the future.
The roots of that philosophy trace back to one man: Arturo Alfonso Schomburg.

Born in 1874 in Santurce, Puerto Rico, to a Black mother from St. Croix and a father of German descent, Schomburg grew up at the intersection of multiple identities. As a child, he was told something that would ignite a lifelong mission — that Black people had no history, no heroes, and no meaningful accomplishments. Rather than internalize that lie, Schomburg dedicated his life to disproving it.
When he arrived in New York City in 1891 at the age of seventeen, Schomburg initially immersed himself in Caribbean liberation movements, advocating for the independence of Cuba and Puerto Rico from Spanish rule. But as political realities shifted and colonial power structures persisted, his focus widened. He recognized that liberation required more than political sovereignty — it demanded historical truth.
Schomburg became a collector not out of hobby, but necessity. While working full-time as a mailroom supervisor at a Brooklyn bank to support his family, he spent his evenings and limited income assembling what he called “vindicating evidences” of Black life across the globe. His methodology was intentional and disciplined. He sought books, manuscripts, prints, letters, and art that documented African civilizations, the lives of Black intellectuals, and the achievements of people erased from dominant historical narratives.
By the early 1920s, his private collection had grown to more than 10,000 items — an unprecedented archive at a time when most academic institutions dismissed Black history as marginal or nonexistent. Yet Schomburg never viewed his collection as personal property. He lent materials to schools and libraries, insisting that access to history was a public right. His belief was simple and enduring: the American Negro must remake his past in order to make his future.
That belief found institutional footing during the Harlem Renaissance. In the early 1920s, the 135th Street Branch of the New York Public Library emerged as a vibrant community hub under the leadership of Ernestine Rose, supported by pioneering Black librarians Catherine Latimer and Regina Anderson. In 1926, with a $10,000 grant from the Carnegie Corporation, the NYPL purchased Schomburg’s collection, establishing the Division of Negro Literature, History, and Prints.

As the collection grew — eventually surpassing 11 million items — the need for a permanent architectural statement became clear. That vision was realized through the work of J. Max Bond Jr., one of the most influential Black architects of the twentieth century. Bond’s design for the Schomburg Center emphasized visibility, accessibility, and dignity. The red-brick façade, African-inspired geometries, and open community spaces rejected the notion of archives as cold or exclusionary.
Inside, every element carries meaning. The Langston Hughes Auditorium serves as a forum for dialogue and performance. The cosmogram mosaic in the lobby, created by Houston Conwill, contains the ashes of Langston Hughes, spiritually anchoring the poet within the institution. Exhibition galleries place Black visual culture at the center, not the margins. Bond’s architecture made a statement: Black memory deserves permanence, prominence, and care.


The centennial season — themed “100: A Century of Collections, Community, and Creativity” — reflects how Schomburg’s original mission continues to evolve. One of its central pillars, Archival Resistance, frames preservation as political action. From slave narratives to the papers of Malcolm X, the act of safeguarding Black records is an ongoing confrontation with historical erasure.
Another pillar, Radical Visual Culture, highlights the Center’s stewardship of Black imagery across film, photography, and recorded sound. Meanwhile, Community Oral History initiatives such as “Stoop Stories” document the lives of Harlem residents over ninety years old, ensuring that living memory survives amid rapid gentrification.

The 2025–2026 exhibition schedule offers rare public access to this legacy, including a sweeping centennial retrospective and focused showcases of archival treasures. These exhibitions do more than display artifacts — they invite Harlem and the world to participate in collective remembrance.
The Schomburg Center’s work does not exist in isolation. Its centennial aligns with a broader moment of cultural preservation across Harlem. The National Black Theatre’s forthcoming “Theatre of the Future,” the memorialization of the Harlem African Burial Ground, and legislative efforts to formalize the Harlem Renaissance Cultural District all point toward a renewed commitment to protecting Harlem’s heroic heritage.
Scholars such as Dr. Vanessa K. Valdés have further deepened public understanding of Schomburg’s global vision, emphasizing his Afro-Puerto Rican identity and diasporic consciousness. Her work reinforces what Schomburg understood intuitively — that Black history is not confined by borders, but connected across oceans and generations.
As Harlem faces the pressures of economic change, the Schomburg Center remains a stabilizing force. It is a place where ancestors speak, where scholars gather, and where community memory is treated as sacred infrastructure. Arturo Schomburg did not simply collect history — he designed a future where Black people could see themselves fully, truthfully, and without apology.
One hundred years later, his lesson endures. Remembering is not passive. In Harlem, memory is action.


Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture: January–May
JANUARY EVENTS
📅 Tuesday, January 13 | 🕠 5:30 PM
Black on Screen | 100 Years of Black Music on Camera
Mapping the Transnational Hip-Hop Revolution
Curated by Daniella Brito
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Thursday, January 22 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Annual Arturo A. Schomburg Conversation and Lecture
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Saturday, January 24 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Transcribe-a-thon: Remaking the World of Arturo Schomburg
📝 Registration opens January 1 at 1:30 PM
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Tuesday, January 27 | 🕠 5:30 PM
Black on Screen | 100 Years of Black Music on Camera
Foundations of Pop: From the Blues to Purple Rain
Curated by Daniella Brito
📍 Schomburg Center
FEBRUARY EVENTS
📅 Wednesday, February 4 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Black on Screen
Works by William Greaves
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Thursday, February 5 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Policing Blackness: Resisting Repression, Police Violence, and Surveillance
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Monday, February 9 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Century of Black Theater Making
Hits & Bits: PJ Gibson
Produced in collaboration with New Federal Theatre
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Tuesday, February 10 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
Pan-Africanism in Practice
Curated by Kazembe Balagun
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Tuesday, February 24 | 🕠 5:30 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
Films by Haile Gerima
Curated by Kazembe Balagun
📍 Schomburg Center
MARCH EVENTS
📅 Thursday, March 5 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Black Women and Resistance: Biography of a Life in Struggle
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Wednesday, March 11 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
Legacies of Abolition
with Release Aging People from Prisons (RAPP)
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Thursday, March 19 | 🕢 7:30 PM
Century of Black Theater Making
Readings + Conversations
Presented in partnership with the Apollo Theater
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Wednesday, March 25 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
The Legacy of Audre Lorde
Curated by Kazembe Balagun
📍 Schomburg Center
APRIL EVENTS (ONLINE)
📅 Thursday, April 2 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Free North: Civil Rights and Racial Justice in the Northeast and Midwest
💻 Online Event
MAY EVENTS (ONLINE)
📅 Thursday, May 7 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Unequal Housing and Transportation: The Fight to Live and Move Freely
💻 Online Event
The Architect of Memory: How Arturo Alfonso Schomburg Built Harlem’s Most Powerful Act of Resistance
At the crossroads of Malcolm X Boulevard and 135th Street stands one of the most consequential intellectual institutions in the world. The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture is not simply a library, nor merely an archive. It is a declaration — that Black history exists, that it matters, and that remembering is itself a revolutionary act. As the Schomburg Center marks its centennial season in 2025–2026, Harlem is not just celebrating an anniversary. It is honoring a philosophy that continues to safeguard the past while shaping the future.
The roots of that philosophy trace back to one man: Arturo Alfonso Schomburg.

Born in 1874 in Santurce, Puerto Rico, to a Black mother from St. Croix and a father of German descent, Schomburg grew up at the intersection of multiple identities. As a child, he was told something that would ignite a lifelong mission — that Black people had no history, no heroes, and no meaningful accomplishments. Rather than internalize that lie, Schomburg dedicated his life to disproving it.
When he arrived in New York City in 1891 at the age of seventeen, Schomburg initially immersed himself in Caribbean liberation movements, advocating for the independence of Cuba and Puerto Rico from Spanish rule. But as political realities shifted and colonial power structures persisted, his focus widened. He recognized that liberation required more than political sovereignty — it demanded historical truth.
Schomburg became a collector not out of hobby, but necessity. While working full-time as a mailroom supervisor at a Brooklyn bank to support his family, he spent his evenings and limited income assembling what he called “vindicating evidences” of Black life across the globe. His methodology was intentional and disciplined. He sought books, manuscripts, prints, letters, and art that documented African civilizations, the lives of Black intellectuals, and the achievements of people erased from dominant historical narratives.
By the early 1920s, his private collection had grown to more than 10,000 items — an unprecedented archive at a time when most academic institutions dismissed Black history as marginal or nonexistent. Yet Schomburg never viewed his collection as personal property. He lent materials to schools and libraries, insisting that access to history was a public right. His belief was simple and enduring: the American Negro must remake his past in order to make his future.
That belief found institutional footing during the Harlem Renaissance. In the early 1920s, the 135th Street Branch of the New York Public Library emerged as a vibrant community hub under the leadership of Ernestine Rose, supported by pioneering Black librarians Catherine Latimer and Regina Anderson. In 1926, with a $10,000 grant from the Carnegie Corporation, the NYPL purchased Schomburg’s collection, establishing the Division of Negro Literature, History, and Prints.

The centennial season — themed “100: A Century of Collections, Community, and Creativity” — reflects how Schomburg’s original mission continues to evolve. One of its central pillars, Archival Resistance, frames preservation as political action. From slave narratives to the papers of Malcolm X, the act of safeguarding Black records is an ongoing confrontation with historical erasure.
Another pillar, Radical Visual Culture, highlights the Center’s stewardship of Black imagery across film, photography, and recorded sound. Meanwhile, Community Oral History initiatives such as “Stoop Stories” document the lives of Harlem residents over ninety years old, ensuring that living memory survives amid rapid gentrification.


As the collection grew — eventually surpassing 11 million items — the need for a permanent architectural statement became clear. That vision was realized through the work of J. Max Bond Jr., one of the most influential Black architects of the twentieth century. Bond’s design for the Schomburg Center emphasized visibility, accessibility, and dignity. The red-brick façade, African-inspired geometries, and open community spaces rejected the notion of archives as cold or exclusionary.
Inside, every element carries meaning. The Langston Hughes Auditorium serves as a forum for dialogue and performance. The cosmogram mosaic in the lobby, created by Houston Conwill, contains the ashes of Langston Hughes, spiritually anchoring the poet within the institution. Exhibition galleries place Black visual culture at the center, not the margins. Bond’s architecture made a statement: Black memory deserves permanence, prominence, and care.

Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture: January–May
JANUARY EVENTS
📅 Tuesday, January 13 | 🕠 5:30 PM
Black on Screen | 100 Years of Black Music on Camera
Mapping the Transnational Hip-Hop Revolution
Curated by Daniella Brito
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Thursday, January 22 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Annual Arturo A. Schomburg Conversation and Lecture
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Saturday, January 24 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Transcribe-a-thon: Remaking the World of Arturo Schomburg
📝 Registration opens January 1 at 1:30 PM
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Tuesday, January 27 | 🕠 5:30 PM
Black on Screen | 100 Years of Black Music on Camera
Foundations of Pop: From the Blues to Purple Rain
Curated by Daniella Brito
📍 Schomburg Center
FEBRUARY EVENTS
📅 Wednesday, February 4 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Black on Screen
Works by William Greaves
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Thursday, February 5 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Policing Blackness: Resisting Repression, Police Violence, and Surveillance
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Monday, February 9 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Century of Black Theater Making
Hits & Bits: PJ Gibson
Produced in collaboration with New Federal Theatre
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Tuesday, February 10 | 🕐 1:00 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
Pan-Africanism in Practice
Curated by Kazembe Balagun
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Tuesday, February 24 | 🕠 5:30 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
Films by Haile Gerima
Curated by Kazembe Balagun
📍 Schomburg Center
MARCH EVENTS
📅 Thursday, March 5 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Black Women and Resistance: Biography of a Life in Struggle
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Wednesday, March 11 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
Legacies of Abolition
with Release Aging People from Prisons (RAPP)
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Thursday, March 19 | 🕢 7:30 PM
Century of Black Theater Making
Readings + Conversations
Presented in partnership with the Apollo Theater
📍 Schomburg Center
📅 Wednesday, March 25 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Black on Screen | Stand Up, Fight Back!
The Legacy of Audre Lorde
Curated by Kazembe Balagun
📍 Schomburg Center
APRIL EVENTS (ONLINE)
📅 Thursday, April 2 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Free North: Civil Rights and Racial Justice in the Northeast and Midwest
💻 Online Event
MAY EVENTS (ONLINE)
📅 Thursday, May 7 | 🕡 6:30 PM
Conversations in Black Freedom Studies
Unequal Housing and Transportation: The Fight to Live and Move Freely
💻 Online Event
The 2025–2026 exhibition schedule offers rare public access to this legacy, including a sweeping centennial retrospective and focused showcases of archival treasures. These exhibitions do more than display artifacts — they invite Harlem and the world to participate in collective remembrance.
The Schomburg Center’s work does not exist in isolation. Its centennial aligns with a broader moment of cultural preservation across Harlem. The National Black Theatre’s forthcoming “Theatre of the Future,” the memorialization of the Harlem African Burial Ground, and legislative efforts to formalize the Harlem Renaissance Cultural District all point toward a renewed commitment to protecting Harlem’s heroic heritage.
Scholars such as Dr. Vanessa K. Valdés have further deepened public understanding of Schomburg’s global vision, emphasizing his Afro-Puerto Rican identity and diasporic consciousness. Her work reinforces what Schomburg understood intuitively — that Black history is not confined by borders, but connected across oceans and generations.
As Harlem faces the pressures of economic change, the Schomburg Center remains a stabilizing force. It is a place where ancestors speak, where scholars gather, and where community memory is treated as sacred infrastructure. Arturo Schomburg did not simply collect history — he designed a future where Black people could see themselves fully, truthfully, and without apology.
One hundred years later, his lesson endures. Remembering is not passive. In Harlem, memory is action.










