Elements of Metallurgy for Dental Students -  5b3769712e297c57c44659ad3c2a2e69 (page 138)

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Elements of Metallurgy for Dental Students - 5b3769712e297c57c44659ad3c2a2e69 (page 138)

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St. Elmo Brady (1884-1966) was the first African American to earn a Ph.D. in chemistry. Born in Louisville, Kentucky, he earned a bachelor's degree at Fisk University in 1908, then taught at the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (now Tuskegee University) before pursuing graduate studies in chemistry at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He earned his doctorate in 1916, then returned to Tuskegee, where he developed the school's undergraduate chemistry program. In 1920, he accepted an offer to chair the chemistry department at Howard University, where he developed the undergraduate chemistry program and started the first graduate chemistry program at a historically black university. In 1927, he returned to Fisk as chair of the chemistry department. Over the next 25 years, he mentored and taught hundreds of students, assembled an outstanding chemistry faculty, and helped establish the Infrared Spectroscopy Institute Robert Lee Lockett, whose name is handwritten on the cover, was the likely owner of this volume. Lockett was born in Bolingbroke, Georgia in 1894. He earned a bachelor's degree from Lincoln University in 1918, and a D.D.S from Howard University Dental School in 1924. The work consists of twenty-five chapters covering the physical and chemical characteristics of the metallic elements. The work is digitized in its entirety.

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1900 - 1910
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Science History Institute
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