
With the appearance of Bronze in 1922, she began to examine racial themes including the impact of lynching on black families and communities, miscegenation, passing, and race-based oppression. Unlike her Renaissance peers, Johnson initially focused on feminist themes, including motherhood, love, loneliness, and imagination in her first collection of poems. She also wrote at least twenty-eight plays, including A Sunday Morning in the South (1925), Blue Blood (1926), Safe (1929), and Blue Eyed Black Boy (1930).

Johnson published four volumes of poetry: The Heart of a Woman (1918), Bronze (1922), An Autumn Love Cycle (1928), and Share My World (1962). Johnson, however, was more than a salon host her volumes of poetry made her the most important female poet of the Harlem Renaissance. Du Bois, James Weldon Johnson, William Stanley Braithwaite, Jean Toomer, Angelina Weld Grimké, Countee Cullen, Alice Dunbar Nelson, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Bruce Nugent, Wallace Thurman, and Jessie Fauset.

Johnson's home became the site of Saturday literary salons where she hosted black intellectuals and writers such as, among others, W.E.B. Alain Locke, Dean of the Humanities at Howard University.

After her husband's death in 1925, Johnson worked as Commissioner of Immigration Conciliation for the Department of Labor to support herself and her two sons.ĭouglas was one of the architects of Washington D.C.'s version of the "New Negro Movement." She was a close friend of its philosophical leader, Dr. Johnson spent the next fifty years in the nation's capital, living a multifaceted and complex life as mother, housewife, music teacher, civil service clerk, writer and social hostess for Washington D.C's black middle class. In 1910 Johnson moved with her husband and two sons to Washington, D.C, when her husband was appointed Recorder of Deeds for the District of Columbia by President William Howard Taft. Johnson graduated from Atlanta University in 1896, attended Oberlin Conservatory of Music in 1902, and married Henry Lincoln Johnson, a prominent attorney, in 1903. Poet, lyricist, short story writer, and playwright Georgia Douglas Johnson was born to George and Laura Douglas Camp in Atlanta, Georgia, on September 10, 1877. history known as the Harlem Renaissance period.

Many say she was the most beloved person during a part of U.S.
