Black History Month: All-Stars of Food and Agriculture
As part of the observance of Black History Month at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, we created a handout to honor and remember the many foundational contributions made by Black scientists in food and agricultural research, extension, and advocacy. It is designed to be accessible for elementary-aged children, and our original goal was that CAES […]

As part of the observance of Black History Month at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, we created a handout to honor and remember the many foundational contributions made by Black scientists in food and agricultural research, extension, and advocacy. It is designed to be accessible for elementary-aged children, and our original goal was that CAES staff could use it in their outreach. The Center for Sustainable Nanotechnology asked permission to post it here on the Sustainable Nano blog as well, so I hope it may be of use to the audience here.
Just a few prominent leaders are listed below and in the linked 2-page PDF. Feel free to print and use this handout in your own outreach!
Did you know…

That Charles Henry Turner first discovered that honeybees can see colors and hear?
(image from the W.E.B. DuBois Papers)
That Lloyd Hall, the “Father of Food Preservation,” invented dozens of ways to preserve meat?
(image from the American Chemical Society)


That Segenet Kelemu has developed many improved varieties of wheat and barley?
(image by ILRI)
That Eristus Sams was a successful corn breeder known as the “King of Seed Corn” in addition to being a Texas mayor and Senate candidate?
(image by Linnaea Malette)


That George Washington Carver’s discoveries and teaching work helped save many farms from insects and disease?
(image from the National Park Service)
That T.M. Campbell was the first Cooperative Extension Agent in the United States, bringing new techniques to hundreds of farmers?
(image from the National Archives, Maryland )


That Fannie Lou Hamer founded the Freedom Farm Cooperative in 1969, purchasing prime farmland to empower impoverished sharecroppers?
(image by Warren K. Leffler, U.S. News & World Report Magazine, via the U.S. Library of Congress)
That Henry Blair invented the revolutionary corn seed planter in 1834, and was the second Black American to be granted a patent?
(image by Henry Blair from his patent application)


That Fredrick McKinley Jones invented the refrigerated truck in 1940, giving millions of people better access to fresh produce?
(image by Mike Renlund)
That John Boyd Jr. founded the National Black Farmers Association, and has lobbied and sued the government against USDA discrimination?
(image from the NBFA)


That Marie Maynard Daly discovered that cholesterol causes clogged arteries, and was the first Black female chemistry Ph.D. in the US?
(image from the Queens College Silhouette Yearbook)
That Stephen Slade, an 18-year-old enslaved blacksmith, invented the process of flue-curing tobacco in 1839 and spurred the North Carolina economy?
(image by Pollinator)
