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  1. William Alexander Attaway (November 19, 1911 – June 17, 1986) was an African-American novelist, short story writer, essayist, songwriter, playwright, and screenwriter. Biography [ edit ] Early life [ edit ]

  2. Dec 20, 2009 · William Attaway, writer and composer, was born in Greenville, Mississippi. His mother, Florence Parry Attaway, worked as a teacher and his father, William Alexander Attaway, was a doctor who helped create the National Negro Insurance Association. In the 1910s, the family moved to Chicago, Illinois. … Read MoreWilliam Attaway (1911-1986)

  3. In Greenville, Mississippi, on November 19, 1911, William Alexander Attaway was born to William S. Attaway, a medical doctor, and Florence Parry Attaway, a teacher (Drapher 56). William Attaway was a member of a migrant professional family. (Lloyd 14) At the age of six, his father moved them to Chicago, Illinois.

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  5. Feb 25, 2014 · William Attaway was most well-known for the novel, Blood on the Forge, a story of three brothers who escape sharecropping life in the south to migrate north and find a new life of freedom in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Exemplifying a common pattern of movement by many black Americans in the 1920s and 1930sknown as the ‘Great Migration,’ the ...

  6. Preceded by. Let Me Breathe Thunder. Blood on the Forge is a migration novel by the African-American writer William Attaway set in the steel valley of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, during 1919, a time when vast numbers of Black Americans moved northward. Attaway's own family was part of this population shift from South to North when he was a child.

    • William Attaway
    • 1941
  7. William Alexander Attaway is best remembered for his novel Blood on the Forge.He was born in Mississippi, and his family moved to Chicago around 1920. His father, William S. Attaway, was a doctor ...

  8. William Attaway was born in Greenville, Mississippi, on 11 November 1911 but spent most of his life outside the South. He moved north to Chicago with his family by the time he was six, and his most important work was shaped by his experience as an African American in the Great Migration and the Great […]

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