Unsung Heroes
Black Excellence in STEM
Freedom, Resistance, and Civil Rights
For the Culture
Phirst Pioneers
100

Originally meant to fall under the birthday of Frederick Douglas, this person started the celebration of “Negro History Week”, which later turned into Black History month

Carter G. Woodson

100

This agricultural scientist created over 300 uses for peanuts. His innovation with agricultural products lead to him being dubbed “Black Leonardo” by Time magazine in 1941

George Washington Carver

100

This 1896 landmark court case established the legal doctrine “separate but equal”, which legally justified racial segregation in America for nearly 60 years

Plessy v. Ferguson

100

Also known as the Queen of Soul, this person was the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Aretha Franklin

100

Vertner Woodson Tandy, one of the Jewels of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. designed a mansion for this Harlem millionaire, who made her fortune through her line of hair care products.

Madam CJ Walker

200

This activist was a central figure within the Stonewall Riots. The P. in her name stood for “Pay it No Mind”

Marsha P. Johnson

200

Also known as the “Black Edison”, this inventor created the multiplex telegraph, which allowed for moving trains to communicate by telegraph

Granville T. Woods

200

The Greenwood district in this city was also known as “Black Wall Street”

Tulsa, OK

200

This future Nobel Laureate published her first book The Bluest Eye” at the age of 39

Toni Morrison

200

Serving as a human computer for NASA, this person was critical in safely putting humans into space. She was later portrayed by Taraji P. Henson in the movie Hidden Figures  

Katherine Johnson

300

This investigative journalist authored A Red Record, a book that provided a history and data on lynching of African Americans in the US.

Ida B. Wells

300

This viral immunologist played a vital role in the development of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine. She currently serves as an Assistant Professor at Harvard School of Public Health

Dr. Kizzmekia S Corbett-Helaire

300

This event occurred in 1965 in Selma, Alabama, where Civil Rights marchers were brutalized by state troopers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge

Bloody Sunday

300

This author was known for his book Roots: The Saga of an American Family. But his first book was The Autobiography of Malcolm X

Alex Haley

300

Known as the “Man who killed Jim Crow” this man mentored many future lawyers, including Thurgood Marshall, as Dean of Howard Law

Charles Hamilton Houston

400

This man was a renowned surgeon and pioneer in the preservation of life-saving blood plasma. For his work, he is known as the “father of blood banks”

Dr. Charles Drew

400

Founder of the first black owned hospital, this surgeon was also the first person to successfully perform cardiac surgery

Dr. Daniel Hale Williams

400

This was the year that the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case which ruled racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional

1954

400

This olympic gold medalist set world records in the 100m and 200m races in the 1988 summer olympics

Florence Griffith Joyner (Flo-Jo)

400

Hailing from Columbia, South Carolina, this 4x MVP helped the Las Vegas Aces win three championship

A’Ja Wilson

500

This fifteen year old was actually the first to refuse to give up her seat on a bus in 1955, nine months before Rosa Parks did, sparking the beginning of the Montgomery Bus Boycotts

Claudette Colvin

500

This physician was the first Black woman to hold a medical degree in the US

Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler

500

This Jamaican Pan-Africanist was the founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Hailed as “Black Moses”, he was a champion of the “Back to Africa” movement and attempted to establish a shipping line between America, the Caribbean, and Africa

Marcus Garvey

500

During the 1995 Source Awards, this member of an Atlanta Duo put the Dirty South in the hip-hop spotlight when he boldly claimed that “The South got something to say”

André 3000

500

This man was the first African American to earn his PhD in chemistry, earning at the University of Illinois

Dr. St. Elmo Brady

M
e
n
u