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Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

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Page 1: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Black History Month

Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association

KCUMB Chapter

Page 2: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Early Pioneers

Page 3: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Benjamin Bannecker• In 1761 he attracted attention

by building a wooden clock that kept precise time

• Self educated, he began astronomical calculations about 1773—accurately predicted a solar eclipse in 1789

• Sent a copy of his first almanac to Thomas Jefferson with a letter asking for aid in bringing about better conditions for American blacks

Page 4: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Carter G. Woodson• Second African American

to earn a doctorate from Harvard University

• Began promoting Negro History Week during the second week of February to celebrate the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. In the 1960s it became Black History Month

Page 5: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Daniel Hale Williams

• One of the first African American surgeons in America

• Helped found Provident Hospital in Chicago in 1891

• In 1893, achieved international fame by performing the world's first successful heart surgery at Provident

Page 6: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Rebecca Lee Crumpler

• Became the first African American woman in the United States to earn an M.D. degree

• Authored A Book of Medical Discourses - one of the very first medical publications by an African American

Page 7: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Mary McLeod Bethune• Appointed administrative

assistant for Negro affairs of the National Youth Administration by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936

• Became an adviser on minority affairs to Roosevelt and assisted the secretary of war in selecting officer candidates for the U.S. Women's Army Corps (WAC)

• Vice president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People from 1940 to 1955

Page 8: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Great Inventors

Page 9: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

George Washington Carver• Agricultural chemist who

discovered 300 uses for peanuts and hundreds of uses for soybeans, pecans and sweet potatoes

• Created recipes and improvements to/for: bleach, buttermilk, ink, instant coffee, linoleum, metal polish, shaving cream, shoe polish, synthetic rubber, talcum powder

• Despite hundreds of inventions, he was only issued three patents

Page 10: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Charles Richard Drew• Black American physician and

surgeon who became an authority on the preservation of human blood for transfusion

• Developed efficient ways to process and store large quantities of blood plasma in “blood banks”

• Agitated the authorities to stop excluding the blood of blacks from plasma-supply networks

Page 11: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Activists

Page 12: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Thurgood Marshall

• First African-American justice on the Supreme Court of the United States

• Primary strategist of the series of cases that ended with the Supreme Court's 1954 decision in the case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka which declared segregation in public schools as unconstitutional

Page 13: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Ruby Bridges• First African American to

enter an all-white school when the New Orleans public school system was ordered to desegregate in 1960

• Her first walk to school inspired the familiar painting by Norman Rockwell

Page 14: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Reverend Vernon Johns• Controversial Alabama

preacher who often upset his conservative congregation with his sermons, including "Segregation After Death" and "When The Rapist Is White"

• Strongly opposed segregation and on one occasion walked into a 'White' restaurant and ordered a sandwich, knowing he was putting his life at risk

• After Johns retired, the congregation appointed a new preacher--Martin Luther King

Page 15: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Dorothy I. Height• One of the major leaders of the

Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s

• Organized "Wednesdays in Mississippi,” to create a dialogue about the Civil Rights Movement between Southern and Northern white and black women

• Served as the president of the National Council of Negro Women for over 40 years

Page 16: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Artists and Authors

Page 17: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Gwendolyn Brooks• American poet whose works deal

with the everyday life of urban blacks

• First African American poet to win the Pulitzer Prize 1949

• Named Poet Laureate of Illinois in

1968

• Received a lifetime achievement award from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1989

Page 18: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Johnnetta B. Cole• Became the seventh president

of Spelman College in 1987

• Called herself “Sister President,”and became known as a strong advocate for the liberal arts curriculum in a changing society

• Author of Conversations: Straight Talk with America's Sister President (1993) and many other scholarly articles focusing on race and and class in the Pan-African world

Page 19: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Gordon Parks

• Bought a used camera in 1938, deciding on a career in photography

• Three years later, received a fellowship from the Julius Rosenwald Foundation to work in the photography section of the Farm Security Administration

• Became a poet, novelist, film

director and photographer

Page 20: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Physicians

Page 21: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

David Satcher M.D. • Medical doctor and public health

administrator

• Past Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

• Appointed as the 16th Surgeon General by President Bill Clinton

• Director of the National Center for Primary Care at the Morehouse School of Medicine

Page 22: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

Barbara Ross Lee, D.O.

• Initially a school teacher after a college advisor discouraged her from becoming a doctor

• Graduated from the Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine in 1973

• First African American woman to be appointed dean of an American medical school

Page 23: Black History Month Courtesy of the Student National Medical Association KCUMB Chapter

William G. Anderson, D.O.

• Graduate of the University of Osteopathic Medicine and Health Sciences in Des Moines

• Leader in the Civil Rights Movement in Georgia where he worked along side Dr. Martin Luther King

• First African American President of the American Osteopathic Association

• Associate Dean of the Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine