Featured Scientist
A tribute to the achievements of Blacks in the STEM fields (past and present).
Frederick McKinley Jones
Frederick McKinley Jones was born in Cincinnati, Ohio on May 17, 1893. Growing up as an orphan and not attending school beyond grade eight, Jones was ultimately to become one of the most prolific black inventors.
Evelyn Boyd Granville
Evelyn Boyd Granville earned her doctorate from Yale University in 1949; in that year she and Marjorie Lee Browne (at the University of Michigan) became the first African American women to receive doctoral degrees in mathematics; it would be more than a dozen years before another black woman would earn a Ph.D. in the field.
Lloyd Augustus Hall
Lloyd Hall was a pioneer in the field of food chemistry, creating many of the food preservative chemicals that are now used to keep food fresh without losing its flavor in scientific communities.
Dr. Jon Slaughter
Dr. Jon Slaughter has a long and distinguished background as a leader in the education, engineering and the scientific communities.
Dr. Fern Y Hunt
In 2000, Dr. Fern Hunt was awarded the prestigious Arthur S. Flemming Award for Outstanding Federal Service. It is given every year to 12 federal employees and 3 of them are in the scientific category.
Kevin T Kornegay
Motorola Foundation Professor; Associate Professor Electronic Design and Applications, and Microelectronics/Microsystems
Dr. Vanessa Northington Gamble
Social activist for equal access to quality medical care for all Americans
George Washington Carver
Prominent agricultural chemist and revered faculty member of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama.