Amazing Black scientists | Live Science

Amazing Black scientists | Live Science


Black scientists have launched us into space, discovered new disease treatments and developed world-changing technologies. Yet the achievements and contributions of Black people to science, technology, engineering and mathematics are often forgotten or unrecognized as a result of systemic racism. From the man who developed a ground-breaking microphone to the human “computers” who helped launch astronauts into space, here are some of the amazing Black scientists who revolutionized their fields.

Charles Drew (1904-1950)

Dr. Charles Drew sitting at his desk

(Image credit: Permission granted by Scurlock Studio Records, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Behring Center, Smithsonian Institution)

Dr. Charles Drew was a brilliant, pioneering doctor who developed new methods for storing blood for transfusions and created the first blood bank. Born in 1904 in Washington, D.C., Drew attended Amherst College in Massachusetts and then McGill University of Medicine in Montreal, and graduated in 1933, according to Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science. (He received a deferred acceptance to Harvard, which only admitted a handful of Black applicants a year, but did not want to wait.) At McGill, he earned the J. Francis Williams Fellowship, an award given to the top five students in the graduating class and studied under bacteriologist John Beattie, who was studying how fluid treatment could aid shock victims, according to the American Chemical Society.



Read More