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Grandmama's Joy by Eloise Greenfield
Grandmama's Joy by Eloise Greenfield




Grandmama

After joining the District of Columbia Black Writers Workshop in 1971, she began to write books for children. She began writing poetry and songs in the 1950s while working at the Patent Office, finally succeeding in getting her first poem published in the Hartford Times in 1962 after many years of writing and submitting poetry and stories. In 1950, she married World War II veteran Robert J. Greenfield began work in the civil service at the U.S. In her third year, however, she found that she was too shy to be a teacher and dropped out. She graduated from Cardozo Senior High School in 1946 and attended Miner Teachers College until 1949. Greenfield experienced racism first-hand in the segregated southern U.S., especially when she visited her grandparents in North Carolina and Virginia.

Grandmama Grandmama

A shy and studious child, she loved music and took piano lessons. Little and his wife Lessie Blanche (née Jones) Little (1906–1986). She was the second oldest of five children of Weston W. Greenfield was born Eloise Little in Parmele, North Carolina, and grew up in Washington, D.C., during the Great Depression in the Langston Terrace housing project, which provided a warm childhood experience for her.






Grandmama's Joy by Eloise Greenfield