After his retirement from Howard University in 1953, Locke moved to New York City. He had heart disease. During his illness, he was cared for by his friend and
protégée,
Margaret Just Butcher. Butcher used notes from Locke's unfinished work to write
The Negro in American Culture (1956).
Journey of ashes Locke was
cremated, and his remains given to Dr.
Arthur Fauset, Locke's close friend and executor of his estate. He was an anthropologist who was a major figure in the Harlem Renaissance. After Fauset died in 1983, and the remains were given to his friend, Reverend Sadie Mitchell, who ministered at
African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas in
Philadelphia. Mitchell retained the ashes until the mid-1990s, when she asked Dr. J. Weldon Norris, a professor of music at
Howard University, to take the ashes to the university. The ashes were held at Howard University's
Moorland–Spingarn Research Center until 2007. That year they were discovered when two former Rhodes scholars were working on the Centennial of Locke's selection as a Rhodes Scholar. Concerned that the human remains were not properly cared for, the university transferred them to its W. Montague Cobb Research Laboratory, which had extensive experience handling human remains (and had worked on those from the
African Burial Ground in New York). Locke's ashes, which had been stored in a plain paper bag in a simple round metal container, were transferred to a small funerary urn and locked in a safe. His personal and literary papers are held within the manuscript department in the university's
Moorland-Spingarn Research Center. • Locke's former residence on R Street NW in Washington's
Logan Circle neighborhood is marked with a historical plaque. • In 2002, scholar
Molefi Kete Asante listed Locke among his
100 Greatest African Americans. Similarly, Columbus Salley's book,
The Black 100, included Locke, ranking him as the 36th most influential African-American. • In 2019, Jeffrey Stewart won a
Pulitzer Prize in Biography for
The New Negro: the Life of Alain Locke. • In 2020, Rhodes Scholar and attorney Dr.
Ann Olivarius wrote a guest column in
The Financial Times suggesting that statues of Locke and Zambian civil-rights activist
Lucy Banda-Sichone replace the statue of
Cecil Rhodes at
Oriel College, Oxford University. Schools named after Locke include: • Alain L. Locke Elementary School PS 208 in
South Harlem • The
Locke High School in
Los Angeles,
California • The Alain Locke Public School, an elementary school in
West Philadelphia • Alain Locke Charter Academy in
Chicago.
Illinois • Alain Locke Elementary School in
Gary, Indiana Major works In addition to the books listed below, Locke edited the "
Bronze Booklet" series, a set of eight volumes published in the 1930s by Associates in Negro Folk Education. He regularly published reviews of poetry and literature by African Americans in journals such as
Opportunity and
Phylon. His works include: •
The New Negro: An Interpretation. New York: Albert and Charles Boni, 1925. •
Harlem: Mecca of the New Negro.
Survey Graphic 6.6 (March 1, 1925). •
When Peoples Meet: A Study of Race and Culture Contacts. Alain Locke and Bernhard J. Stern (eds). New York: Committee on Workshops,
Progressive Education Association, 1942. •
The Philosophy of Alain Locke: Harlem Renaissance and Beyond. Edited by
Leonard Harris. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1989. •
Race Contacts and Interracial Relations: Lectures of the Theory and Practice of Race. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1916. Reprinted, edited by Jeffery C. Stewart. Washington: Howard University Press, 1992. •
Negro Art Past and Present. Washington: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936 (Bronze Booklet No. 3). •
The Negro and His Music. Washington: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936 (Bronze Booklet No. 2). • "The Negro in the Three Americas".
Journal of Negro Education 14 (Winter 1944): 7–18. • "Negro Spirituals".
Freedom: A Concert in Celebration of the 75th Anniversary of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States (1940). Compact disc. New York: Bridge, 2002. Audio (1:14). • "Spirituals" (1940).
The Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture. Edited by Jeffrey C. Stewart. New York and London: Garland, 1983, pp. 123–26. •
The New Negro: An Interpretation. New York: Arno Press, 1925. •
Four Negro Poets. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1927. •
Plays of Negro Life: a Source-Book of Native American Drama. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1927. •
A Decade of Negro Self-Expression. Charlottesville, Virginia, 1928. •
The Negro in America. Chicago: American Library Association, 1933. •
Negro Art – Past and Present. Washington, D.C.: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936. •
The Negro and His Music. Washington, D.C.: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936; also New York: Kennikat Press, 1936. •
The Negro in Art: A Pictorial Record of the Negro Artist and of the Negro Theme in Art. Washington, D.C.: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1940; also New York: Hacker Art Books, 1940. • "A Collection of Congo Art".
Arts 2 (February 1927): 60–70. • "Harlem: Dark Weather-vane".
Survey Graphic 25 (August 1936): 457–462, 493–495. • "The Negro and the American Stage".
Theatre Arts Monthly 10 (February 1926): 112–120. • "The Negro in Art".
Christian Education 13 (November 1931): 210–220. • "Negro Speaks for Himself".
The Survey 52 (April 15, 1924): 71–72. • "The Negro's Contribution to American Art and Literature".
The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 140 (November 1928): 234–247. • "The Negro's Contribution to American Culture".
Journal of Negro Education 8 (July 1939): 521–529. • "A Note on African Art".
Opportunity 2 (May 1924): 134–138. • "Our Little Renaissance".
Ebony and Topaz, edited by Charles S. Johnson. New York: National Urban League, 1927. • "Steps Towards the Negro Theatre".
Crisis 25 (December 1922): 66–68. •
The Problem of Classification in the Theory of Value: or an Outline of a Genetic System of Values. PhD dissertation: Harvard, 1917. • "Locke, Alain". [Autobiographical sketch.]
Twentieth Century Authors. Edited by Stanley Kunitz and Howard Haycroft. New York: 1942, p. 837. • "The Negro Group".
Group Relations and Group Antagonisms. Edited by Robert M. MacIver. New York: Institute for Religious Studies, 1943. •
World View on Race and Democracy: A Study Guide in Human Group Relations. Chicago: American Library Association, 1943. •
Le Rôle du nègre dans la culture des Amériques. Port-au-Prince: Haiti Imprimerie de l'état, 1943. • "Values and Imperatives". In Sidney Hook and Horace M. Kallen (eds),
American Philosophy, Today and Tomorrow. New York: Lee Furman, 1935, pp. 312–33. Reprinted: Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press, 1968; Harris,
The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 31–50. • "Pluralism and Ideological Peace". In Milton R. Konvitz and Sidney Hook (eds),
Freedom and Experience: Essays Presented to Horace M. Kallen. Ithaca: New School for Research and Cornell University Press, 1947, pp. 63–69. • "Cultural Relativism and Ideological Peace". In Lyman Bryson, Louis Finfelstein, and R. M. MacIver (eds),
Approaches to World Peace. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1944, pp. 609–618. Reprinted in
The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 67–78. • "Pluralism and Intellectual Democracy".
Conference on Science, Philosophy and Religion, Second Symposium. New York: Conference on Science, Philosophy and Religion, 1942, pp. 196–212. Reprinted in
The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 51–66. • "The Unfinished Business of Democracy".
Survey Graphic 31 (November 1942): 455–61. • "Democracy Faces a World Order".
Harvard Educational Review 12.2 (March 1942): 121–28. • "The Moral Imperatives for World Order".
Summary of Proceedings, Institute of International Relations, Mills College, Oakland, CA, June 18–28, 1944, 19–20. Reprinted in
The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 143, 151–152. • "Major Prophet of Democracy". Review of
Race and Democratic Society by Franz Boas.
Journal of Negro Education 15.2 (Spring 1946): 191–92. • "Ballad for Democracy".
Opportunity: Journal of Negro Life 18:8 (August 1940): 228–29. •
Three Corollaries of Cultural Relativism. Proceedings of the Second Conference on the Scientific and the Democratic Faith. New York, 1941. • "Reason and Race".
Phylon 8:1 (1947): 17–27. Reprinted in Jeffrey C. Stewart, ed.
The Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture. New York and London: Garland, 1983, pp. 319–27. • "Values That Matter". Review of
The Realms of Value, by Ralph Barton Perry.
Key Reporter 19.3 (1954): 4. • "Is There a Basis for Spiritual Unity in the World Today?" ''Town Meeting: Bulletin of America's Town Meeting on the Air'' 8.5 (June 1, 1942): 3–12. • "Unity through Diversity: A Bahá'í Principle".
The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. IV, 1930–1932. Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1989 [1933]. Reprinted in Locke 1989, 133–138. Note: Leonard Harris's reference (Locke 1989, 133 n.) should be amended to read, Volume IV, 1930–1932 (not "V, 1932–1934"). • "Lessons in World Crisis".
The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. IX, 1940–1944. Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1945. Reprint, Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1980 [1945]. • "The Orientation of Hope".
The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. V, 1932–1934. Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1936. Reprint in Locke 1989, 129–132. Note: Leonard Harris's reference (Locke 1989, 129 n.) should be amended to read, "Volume V, 1932–1934" (not "Volume IV, 1930–1932"). • "A Baháʼí Inter-Racial Conference".
The Baháʼí Magazine (Star of the West), 18.10 (January 1928): 315–16. • "Educator and Publicist",
Star of the West 22.8 (November 1931), 254–55. Obituary of George William Cook [Baha'i], 1855–1931. • "Impressions of Haifa". [Appreciation of Baha'i leader, Shoghi Effendi, whom Locke met during his first of two Baha'i pilgrimages to Haifa, Palestine (now Israel)].
Star of the West 15.1 (1924): 13–14; Alaine Locke, "Impressions of Haifa", in
Baháʼí Year Book, Vol. One, April 1925 – April 1926, comp. National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada (New York: Baháʼí Publishing Committee, 1926), 81, 83; Alaine Locke, "Impressions of Haifa", in
The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. II, April 1926 – April 1928, comp. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States and Canada (New York: Bahá'í Publishing Committee, 1928; reprint, Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1980), 125, 127; Alain Locke, "Impressions of Haifa", in ''The Bahá'í World: A Biennial International Record'', Vol. III, April 1928 – April 1930, comp. National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada (New York: Baháʼí Publishing Committee, 1930; reprint, Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1980), 280, 282. • "Minorities and the Social Mind".
Progressive Education 12 (March 1935): 141–50. •
The High Cost of Prejudice.
Forum 78 (December 1927). •
The Negro Poets of the United States. Anthology of Magazine Verse 1926 and Yearbook of American Poetry. Sesquicentennial edition. Ed. William S. Braithwaite. Boston: B.J. Brimmer, 1926, pp. 143–151. •
The Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture. Edited by Jeffrey C. Stewart. New York and London: Garland, 1983, pp. 43–45. •
Plays of Negro Life: A Source-Book of Native American Drama. Alain Locke and Montgomery Davis (eds). New York and Evanston: Harper and Row, 1927. "Decorations and Illustrations by Aaron Douglas". • "Impressions of Luxor".
The Howard Alumnus 2.4 (May 1924): 74–78.
Posthumous works Alain Locke's previously unpublished, posthumous works include: Locke, Alain. "The Moon Maiden" and "Alain Locke in His Own Words: Three Essays".
World Order 36.3 (2005): 37–48. Edited, introduced and annotated by Christopher Buck and Betty J. Fisher. Four previously unpublished works by Alain Locke: • "The Moon Maiden" (37) [a love poem for a white woman who left him]; • "The Gospel for the Twentieth Century" (39–42); • "Peace between Black and White in the United States" (42–45); • "Five Phases of Democracy" (45–48). Locke, Alain. "Alain Locke: Four Talks Redefining Democracy, Education, and World Citizenship". Edited, introduced and annotated by Christopher Buck and Betty J. Fisher. World Order 38.3 (2006/2007): 21–41. Four previously unpublished speeches/essays by Alain Locke: • "The Preservation of the Democratic Ideal" (1938 or 1939); • "Stretching Our Social Mind" (1944); • "On Becoming World Citizens" (1946); • "Creative Democracy" (1946 or 1947). ==See also==