Cain, William Milton “Bill” (B.S., Horticulture, 1917)

Headshot of William Milton "Bill" Cain

William Milton Cain was born, in Waco, Texas, on 17 January 1895, the eldest of five children born to William D. Cain, a postal clerk, and his wife, Mary A. Blocker Cain. William the elder, an influential individual in the Waco Black community, later had the local NAACP Chapter named in his honor for his advocacy on behalf of African Americans in Waco and throughout Texas (Duncan, 2013). The younger William studied Horticulture at Iowa State College, where he lived at the Sigma Nu Fraternity house at 905 Douglas Avenue in Fall 1913, possibly working there as a waiter as Frederick Patterson’s experience suggests was a common employment for cash-strapped Black students at ISC (Patterson, 1991). From spring 1914 until his graduation in 1917, he resided at 1008 Burnett Avenue, the home of local Ames lawyer Chaucer Gory (C. G.) Lee and his wife Emma McCarthy Lee. While at ISC, Bill participated in the Horticultural Club and the ISC Cadet Corps, which he noted when he registered for the World War I Draft in Waco, Texas. According to Frederick Patterson, many male Black students stayed the full four years in the Cadet Corps to receive the subsidy to pay for their education at the school as Patterson did, and as one assumes, Cain did also (Patterson, 1991).

As a member of the Horticultural Club, Cain was on the Apple Judging Team. His membership was the focus of a racist incident during the interstate-judging competition in 1916, when students from Iowa, Nebraska, and Missouri competed at the state capitol (“Ames Team Wins,” 1916). The team from Missouri refused to compete against a Black student when they learned about Cain’s membership on the Ames team. Initially, the judges from the state horticultural society, the competition’s hosts, asked Cain to leave the team, which would have allowed Missouri to compete. It’s unclear what transpired after that decision, but the society changed its ruling in time for Cain to compete. Missouri withdrew from the competition and Iowa State went on to win (“Ames Team Wins,” 1916).

After graduation, Cain returned to Waco to be a farm laborer, likely at Prairie View Normal and Industrial College, as The Iowa State Bystander announced that Cain, employed at Prairie View, and his wife had welcomed their first child, a daughter, in September 1919 (Ames News, 1919). It’s unclear what happened to his first wife, but Cain eventually moved north and was employed by the U.S. Government as a railway clerk. He married Fostoria Dewey Logan in Chicago, Illinois, on 2 January 1931. He died 21 May 1977 in Dowagiac, Michigan. Cain was a Methodist at the time of his death. He is buried in Dailey Cemetery, La Grange, Michigan.

Sources

Photo Credit: Iowa State University. (1917). 1917 Bomb, p.83.  https://n2t.net/ark:/87292/w9m05s 

Ames news. (1919, 26 September). The Iowa State Bystander. n.p.

Ames team wins: Missouri students draw color line. (1916, 15 December). The Iowa State Bystander. p. 2.

Duncan, Robert J. (2013). Cain, William D., 1867-1939. Texas State Historical Association Handbook of Texas. Updated 2020.  https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/cain-william-d 

Patterson, F. D. (1991). Chronicles of faith: The autobiography of Frederick D. Patterson. Tuscaloosa: U of Alabama Press.

Richardson, Samuel Alonzo (D.V.M., 1918)

Headshot of Samuel Alonzo Richardson

Samuel Alonzo Richardson was born December 25, 1892, in Charleston, South Carolina, to Charles Richardson and Mary White Richardson (Kuennen, 2022). In 1912, after receiving a 2-year diploma from Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University), Samuel then came to Iowa State College to study veterinary medicine. While attending ISC, he was summoned back to South Carolina due to the sudden death of his father.  He worked for the Roup shoe store the summer of 1917 but left the position to “enter the senior class” at ISC. Richardson earned his Doctorate of Veterinary Medicine from ISC in 1918.

During his time in Ames, he lived in several locations: Boone & Welsh, Frank’s Place (2840 West Street), and 157 Campus Avenue. Like Black classmates, he joined the Corps of Cadets, which helped to subsidize his tuition at ISC, having reached the rank of Sergeant by the time he registered for the WWI draft in June 1917. Upon graduation, a “reception for the colored boys who are caled (sic) to the colors” was held by Mr. and Mrs. Gater on Kellogg Avenue to honor Dr. Richardson, as well as four other students, before they left Ames to enter (“Ames, IA,” 1918).

After the war, Richardson returned to Iowa. He married Mildred Ethel Beaubian at the A.M.E. Church in Boone, Iowa, on September 19, 1920. The following year, Richardson began coursework at the University of Iowa to pursue a career in medicine. He completed a B.S. in 1926 and his M.D. in 1926. Graduation was followed by interning at a Chicago hospital and, in 1929, a move to Milwaukee, WI, where he was licensed to practice medicine that January (Kuennen, 2022). When Dr. Richardson appeared with his wife and two children in the 1930 U.S. Census, he was working as a meat inspector at a packing house. By the time of the 1940 U.S. Census, two children later, he was employed as a physical scientist at a Milwaukee hospital. He was self-employed as an M.D. by the time he registered for the Old Man’s Draft in 1942.

By 1950, the Richardsons had separated, and Samuel had returned to Charleston, where he opened a shoe repair store. How long he was employed in the profession he worked at while attending ISC is unknown, but at the time of his death ten years later, his occupation was once again listed as “veterinarian.”

Dr. Samuel Alonzo Richardson, died 28 July 1960, at the age of 68 of natural causes in Lincolnville, SC, and is buried in the Reserved Fellowship Cemetery in Charleston, SC.

Sources

Ames, IA. (1918, July 19). The bystander. n.p.

Kuennen, Brad, ISU Veterinary Medicine early graduates of color, University Library, Iowa State University,. Retrieved from https://instr.iastate.libguides.com/c.php?g=1224480&p=8958307

Campbell, Thomas Monroe (Summer Course, 1910)

Headshot of Thomas Monroe Campbell

Thomas Monroe Campbell was born in Bowman, Georgia, on 1 February 1883 to Susan Campbell and William A. Campbell, a tenant farmer and itinerant Methodist preacher. He started school at Tuskegee Institute in 1899 at age 16 and, after graduating in 1906, he became the first Black Extension Agent in the country and worked at Tuskegee for 47 years (“Tuskegee Institute’s Farm Leader Dies”). He was selected following graduation by Tuskegee’s Booker T. Washington and George Washington Carver, to operate the farm demonstration wagon, which Campbell rode throughout Macon County, teaching Black farmers better farming practices. This wagon became known as the “moveable school” and was the precursor to the national Cooperative Extension Service formed in 1914. Soon after having been appointed to his new role with the moveable school, in 1910, Campbell was sent to Iowa State College by the U.S.D.A. to conduct summer graduate coursework in agricultural extension. This coursework would strengthen his knowledge of agricultural extension methods that could be applied on the job with farmers in the South (Jones, 1979). The 1 June 1911, he married Ann (aka Anna, aka Annie) Marie Ayers in Tuskegee, Alabama, where the couple subsequently raised five children.

During his time with the Extension Service, Campbell’s job and territory grew from county agent to head of extension in Alabama, and finally, in 1918, only 12 years after his first appointment in the new service, to field agent of the lower south, a job he held until 1953 (“Tuskegee Institute’s Farm Leader Dies”). It was during his time as a Field Agent of the Agricultural Extension Department, U.S.D.A., in 1935, that Campbell, along with at least 21 other Black professionals who had been ISC Students, attended the Iowa State College Alumni Banquet held for Frederick D. Patterson’s inauguration as President of Tuskegee.

By the 1930s, from the 16 year-old boy who had shown up at Tuskegee with only one year of education under his belt, Campbell had grown to be one the nation’s leaders in agricultural extension, becoming well known throughout the state of Alabama, the South, and the nation. In 1930, Campbell received a William E. Harmon Foundation Award for Distinguished Achievement Among Negroes for his contributions in the field of farming and rural life, the first person ever to receive a Harmon award in this field (Jones, 1979). According to Allen W. Jones, Campbell’s distinguished career included many honors. In the 1930s ad ’40s, alone, the recognitions of Campbell’s expertise and talents were numerous:

 Governor Bibb Graves of Alabama recognized Campbell’s leadership by commissioning him the official Alabama delegate for “National Negro Day” at the Pacific International Exposition. Campbell was sent as a delegate to the American Farm Bureau Federation meeting in Chicago in 1933, the Negro Leaders’ Agricultural Conference in Washington in 1936; the International Council of Religious Education meeting in Columbus, Ohio, in 1938, and the National Nutrition Conference called by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1940. In 1938 Campbell was elected to membership in the Eugene Field Society, a national association of authors and journalists, in recognition of his “literary skill and craftsmanship.” The honor was based upon his numerous journal and newspaper articles and the publication of his book, The Movable School Goes to the Negro Farmer, in 1936. (Jones, 1979, p. 54). 

Always a supporter of organizations in his community, especially those that helped young African Americans, Campbell was appointed to the National Advisory Committee for Community Service Projects by First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt in 1940 as America’s entry into World War II loomed. During the war, he served as “consultant in the southern states to the National Organization of the War Bond Committee by the U.S. Treasury Department” (Jones, 1979, p. 55). So-called “Negro Deputies” were Treasury Department appointees who sold war bonds to Black farmers and rural families, or developed strategies to do this, in the South. Campbell served with fellow Iowa Staters Preston S. Bowles of Alcorn A & M College, Alcorn, Mississippi, and Lonnie Marshall, of Florida A & A College, Tallahassee, Florida. Thomas M. Campbell died in Montgomery, Alabama, 8 February 1956.

Sources

Photo credit: Possibly the United States Department of Agriculture – National Archives, Maryland Scanned by Audra M. Akins, Public Domain,   https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=66232671 

Jones, Allen W. (1979, January). Thomas M. Campbell: Black agricultural leader of the New South. Agricultural history, 53.1, 42-5

Tuskegee Institute’s farm leader dies after 47 years of outstanding service. (1956, February 12). The Montgomery advertiser. Reprinted in Alabama Department of Archives and History. Ancestry.com. Alabama, U.S., Surname Files Expanded, 1702–1981 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. Accessed 31 December 2021

Madison, Walter G. Sr. (B.S., Mechanical Engineering, 1914; M.S., Engineering)

Headshot of Walter G Madison Sr

Evidence suggests that Walter Garfield Madison, member of the Cosmopolitan Club, 1914 graduate of Iowa State College, and head of an early Black family in Ames, was the first Black Iowa State student to put down roots in Ames after he graduated.

Madison came to Ames sometime between his graduation from Tuskegee in 1909 and his enumeration in the US Census on May 5th, 1910, as a laborer living at the campus home of Edgar Stanton. Such a move before enrolling would have helped Madison establish Iowa residency to lower his cost of tuition. Born in Manor, Texas, in 1888, Madison had left his parents and eight brothers and sisters behind to seek higher education in engineering, first earning a diploma in Steam Engineering from Tuskegee Institute and, then, a Bachelor’s of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from Iowa State College. While at ISC, Madison played clarinet in the band, participated in the Forum Literary Society, and the Cosmopolitan Club.

His marriage to Gussie Irene Askew occurred in Cook County, IL, in 1917. The two later moved into a house at 1204 Third Street and had 4 sons—Walter Jr., Archie, Horace, and Ira. Both Walter, Jr., and Archie attended Iowa State.

The Madisons became one of the leading Black families in Ames, with Walter operating a successful plumbing and heating company that, over the years, won significant contracts with the City of Ames, Tuskegee Institute, and Fisk University, among others. Throughout his time in Ames, Madison was a strident voice for respectful and equitable treatment of Blacks. In 1922, he won a lawsuit against an Ames restaurant owner for discrimination.

Like Archie and Nancy Martin, progenitors of the best-known Black family in Ames, who housed Black students in their home at 218 Lincoln Way, the Madisons opened their home to no fewer than 12 Black ISC students and also took in other Black lodgers between 1926 and 1941.

After some years splitting time between his Ames business and work at Fisk University in Nashville, where he held the position of Chief Engineer beginning in 1938, Madison moved his family from Ames permanently to take up employment as a Professor of Engineering at Howard University in 1942.

Iowa State College Dissertation Title: The design of a central heating system [for the] Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (Ala.), 1914 

Iowa State University Catalog Record:https://iowa-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/12tutg/01IASU_ALMA21190364460002756 

Sources

Photo Credit: Iowa State University. (1914). The Bomb 1914. p. 83. Retrieved from  https://digitalcollections.lib.iastate.edu/islandora/object/isu:TheBomb_47457#page/94/mode/2up

Biography available at  HBCU Connections at Iowa State University  Walter G. Madison, Sr. ( http://hbcuconnections.iastatedigital.org/Walter_G._Madison,_Sr. )

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