Audre Lorde Biography - Facts, Childhood, Family Life & Achievements
Daniel Hoffman
Published May 28, 2026
Audre Lorde Biography
(American Poet Whose Poems Expressed Anger and Outrage at Civil and Social Injustices)Birthday: February 18, 1934 (Aquarius)
Born In: Harlem, New York, United States
Advanced SearchAudre Lorde was a noted Afro-American writer, educationist, feminist, and civil rights activist. Born a rebel, she never had easy relationship at home, developing friendship with a group of ‘outcasts’ at school. Starting to write poems in her early teens, she supported her college education doing odd jobs and later began her career as a librarian. She found teaching as satisfying as writing poems and taught English in several colleges. All the while, she continued to write, publishing her first book of poems around the age of 34, which was quickly followed by others. Calling herself a “black, feminist, lesbian, mother and poet”, she also wrote in prose, lashing out at the injustice meted out to the marginalized. However, her anger was never destructive. Throughout her life, she influenced great many people; both men and women. A warrior at heart, she never learned to give up, fighting for rights till her death from stomach cancer at the age of 58. Quick FactsAlso Known As: Audre Geraldine Lorde
Died At Age: 58
Family:Spouse/Ex-: Edward Rollins
father: Frederick Byron Lorde
mother: Linda Gertrude Belmar Lorde
siblings: Helen, Phyllis
children: Elizabeth Lorde-Rollins, Jonathon Rollins
Died on: November 17, 1992
place of death: Christiansted, U.S. Virgin Islands
Ancestry: Barbadian American
Notable Alumni: Hunter College, National Autonomous University Of Mexico
Cause of Death: Breast Cancer
City: Harlem, New York
U.S. State: New Yorkers
Founder/Co-Founder: Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press
More Factseducation: Columbia University, National Autonomous University Of Mexico, Hunter College
awards: 1981 - American Book Awards
- Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Poetry
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American CelebritiesFeministsCivil Rights ActivistsAmerican WomenColumbia University Childhood & Early YearsAudre Lorde was born on February 18, 1934 in Harlem, New York City. Named at birth as ‘Audrey’, she dropped the ‘y’ early in her childhood because she fancied that Audre Lorde, both ending with ‘e’, sounded more symmetrical. She also hated the tail of ‘y’ hanging from her name.Her parents were of Afro-Caribbean descent. Her father, Frederick Byron Lorde, originally from Barbados, was in the real estate business. He was very charming and ambitious; but rather aloof towards his children.Her mother, Linda nee Belmar, was from Grenada. Although of African-Caribbean descent, she had a lighter skin and was often passed as Spanish. She was also very strict and Audre, born rebel, never had easy relationship with her.Audre was born youngest of her parents’ three children, having two elder sisters named Phyllis and Helen. Born near-sighted to the point of being legally blind and also tongue-tied, which inhibited her speech development, she was never close to her sisters.An unusual child, she did not speak until she was four years old. As soon as she started speaking, Linda introduced her to the alphabets and very soon she learned to read and write.From her childhood, Audre loved poetries, memorizing each of them. If she was asked a question, she would find something appropriate, reciting that as her answer. At the same time, argumentative and resentful of her sisters, she was very difficult to deal with. Beating would not straighten her.Audre began her education first at St. Mark’s School and later at St. Catherine School. The environment in these schools was so racist that the nuns found her braids, typically Afro-American, inappropriate for the school. In fact, they found nothing right with her.After completing her elementary education, she moved to Hunter College High School for her secondary education. Here she made friends with a group of rebels, meeting Diane di Prima, a fellow student and a budding poet.Audre wrote her first poem when she was in her eighth grade. In her senior class, she became the editor of the school magazine. During this period, she also participated in John Henrik Clark's Harlem Writers' Guild, learning about Africa from him.At the age of seventeen, she had her first poem published in ‘Seventeen Magazine’. Written as tribute to her first love, the poem was found to be too advanced for the school magazine.In 1951, on graduating from school, she entered Hunter College with English literature and philosophy, supporting herself with odd jobs, such as ghost writer, social worker, factory worker, X-ray technician, medical clerk etc. Because of her preoccupations, she took several years to earn her bachelor’s degree.In 1954, she spent one year, studying at the National University of Mexico. The time spent there was very important to her, as it helped her to affirm her identity both as a poet and a lesbian.On her return to New York, she rejoined Hunter College, earning her bachelor’s degree in 1959. During this period, she supported herself by working as a librarian. Concurrently, she continued to write and began to participate actively in Greenwich Village’s gay culture.On receiving her B.A. degree, Audre Lorde entered Columbia University, earning her master’s in library science in 1961. During this period, she supported herself by working as a librarian at Mount Vernon Public library, a position she held until her marriage in 1962.