Jackman was a supporter and promoter of African American theater. He was a founding member for the Krigwa Players Little Negro Theater in 1926.[4] He directed Georgia Douglas Johnson's Plumes for the company in 1929.[5] He also helped establish the Harlem Experimental Theater in 1929, and was a member of the American Theater Wing Stage Door Canteen in the 1940s.[6][4]
Jackman was a member of the Alpha Phi Alphafraternity, the Urban League, and the Negro Actors Guild on which he served as the executive board.[3] Jackman was an associate editor of New Challenge magazine from 1935 to 1937.[4] He was also a contributing editor to Phylon from 1944 to 1956 and an advisory editor from 1957 to 1961.[5]
Jackman was a part of Harlem's gay community and frequented the Hamilton Lodge Ball, an annual masquerade which attracted thousands of costumed men and women dressed in drag.[5] Jackman was a well-known bachelor throughout his life. He frequently escorted single women and was usually king of the Urban League's Beaux Arts Ball.[5] Jackman spent periods in Europe, particularly in Paris where he met expatriate writer Edouard Roditi. He was known for being social and mingled with various prominent figures of the Harlem Renaissance such as Langston Hughes, Carl Van Vetchen, Wallace Thurman, Claude McKay, and Countee Cullen.[5]
Jackman was best known for his friendship with poet Countee Cullen who he met in high school. They were called the "Johnathan and David of the Harlem Renaissance" because of their close friendship.[7] Cullen dedicated his famous poem "Heritage" to Jackman.[8][7] Jackman introduced Cullen to his first wife Yolande Du Bois, daughter of W. E. B. Du Bois, and was the best man at their wedding in 1928. Two months after the wedding, Jackman and Cullen traveled together to Europe without the bride, which has led scholars to surmise that they were lovers.[7][4] After Cullen died in 1946, Jackman requested that the Georgia accumulation of artifacts be renamed from the Harold Jackman Collection to the Countee Cullen Memorial Collection in his honor.[9] After Jackman died the collection was changed to the Cullen-Jackman Collection.
Jackman died in a Maine hospital on July 8, 1961.[10] He was survived by a brother, Bertram Jackman, and sister, Ivie Jackman.[4] His estate was estimated at $40,000 (US$407,840 in 2023 dollars[11]) at the time of his death. Listed as beneficiaries were his sister Ivie Jackman and his friend Mrs. Diana Jean Shaw.[10][12]
Legacy
Jackman's sister Ivie Jackman instituted the Harold Jackman Memorial Committee and she was chairman.[13]
The Cullen-Jackman Memorial Collection at Atlanta University "documents the artistic and creative nature of those of African descent."[14]