Arthur P. Davis was born on November 21, 1904, in
Hampton, Virginia. He was raised by his parents, Frances Nash Davis and Andrew Davis along with his eight brothers. In an autobiographical essay entitled "Columbia-College and Renaissance Harlem-Autobiographical Essay", Davis describes his father, who worked as a plasterer, as an authoritarian figure, "a Victorian head-of-the-house but also an excellent parent." Although Davis was a gifted grammar school student, he was also required to help contribute to the family household during the summers by working at a black resort on the
Chesapeake Bay. After graduating from
Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in 1922, Davis spent a year attending
Howard University in
Washington, D.C., where he then transferred to
Columbia College in
New York City. As the first integrated school that he attended, Davis recalled the oppressive responsibility of the move in his autobiographical essay "Columbia College and Renaissance Harlem": Despite having a scholarship, Davis boarded with a family in
Harlem and needed to earn money for his
room and board. Davis sought work from city politician Charlie Anderson (who was married to Davis's cousin, Emma Anderson), as well as from a close associate of
Booker T. Washington, Davis was only able to acquire menial jobs such as a late night apartment-house elevator boy and an unsuccessful stint as a houseboy in a
Park Avenue mansion. However, in his second year, Davis was able to find a job as a counselor with the Children's Aid Society on East 127th Street thanks to a Hampton connection. Davis looks back on this experience stating, "As an undergraduate I naturally did not fully understand the significance of the events happening around me, but I did get the feel of the times." Davis attended Columbia during the most active years of the
Harlem Renaissance. "I had a ringside seat", he recalled in his "Columbia College and Renaissance Harlem" essay, "on the events of those stirring and exhilarating years it was bliss to be alive in those days." ==Career==