Madison, Walter G. Jr.  (B.S., Engineering, 1940)

Walter Garfield Madison, Jr., was born in Ames, Iowa, on 3 November 1918, the first-born son of parents Walter Garfield Madison (ISC class of 1914), the first licensed Black plumber in the state, and his wife, Gussie Irene Askew Madison. Walter, Jr., graduated from Ames High School in 1936 and enrolled in the Engineering program at Iowa State College. During his time at ISC, he was a member of the Iowa State Players.

He lived at home with his family at 1204 Third Street. His parents housed many Black ISC students there until they moved to live year round in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1942. When he registered for the draft in 1940, Walter, Jr., was listed as self-employed by the W. G. Madison Company of Nashville, Tennessee, where he married Anita Smith. He died 22 August 1985, in Washington, D.C., after a career as an mechanical engineer.

Sources

Photo Credit: Iowa State University. (1938). The Bomb 1938. p. 118. Retrieved from  https://digitalcollections.lib.iastate.edu/islandora/object/isu:TheBomb_36547#page/192/mode/2up

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. )

Martin, Robert Leander  (B.S., Electrical Engineering, 1942)

Headshot of Robert Leander Martin

Robert Leander Martin was born the sixth of six children in Dubuque, IA, 9 February 1919, to chiropodist (podiatrist) Dr. Henry Ambrose Martin and his wife, Mattie A. Martin.

Robert Martin flew 64 missions with the Tuskegee Airmen in WWII, was shot down in enemy territory, and received multiple awards for valor, including the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Purple Heart, seven awards of the Air Medal, and as a surviving member of the Tuskegee Airmen, a Congressional Gold Medal in 2007 that acknowledged the unit for their “unique military record that inspired revolutionary reform in the Armed Forces.” ( https://airandspace.si.edu/collection-objects/congressional-gold-medal-tuskegee-airmen/nasm_I20071282001 ).

Martin married Odette C. Ewell 21 August 1950, and they had four children, Gabrielle, Noelle, Dominique, and Robert Martin Jr. After finding it difficult to get employment in electrical engineering because of his race and moving from one low-wage, service job to another, Martin finally secured a job as a draftsman with the Chicago Park District (https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/robert-leander-martin-1919-2018/) Robert Martin died in Olympia Fields, Cook County, Illinois, 26 July 2018, of pneumonia. In 2019, an Act of Congress renamed the US Post Office in Olympia Fields as the Capt. Robert Martin Post Office, and in Jul 2020, the Dubuque Regional Airport Commission voted to support renaming the airport terminal after Martin. Fundraising is now underway to complete that project.

Daniels, Walter Thomas (M.S., Civil Engineering, 1932; Ph.D., Engineering Science and Mechanics, 1941)

Iowa State College Dissertation Title: Deflection of rigid frames stressed beyond the yield point; The effects of delayed curing on the compressive strength and permeability of cement mortars, 1941; 1932

Iowa State University Proquest Access: https://www.proquest.com/docview/301853901

Sources

Biography available at  HBCU Connections at Iowa State University  Walter T. Daniels  ( http://hbcuconnections.iastatedigital.org/Walter_T._Daniels )

Dabney, Walter Hampton, Jr. (M.S., Highways,1933)

Headshot of Walter Hampton Dabney

Iowa State College Dissertation Title: Laboratory and road tests to determine some automotive characteristics used in highway design, 1933 

Iowa State University Catalog Record:https://iowa-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/12tutg/01IASU_ALMA21189687810002756

Sources

Biography available at  HBCU Connections at Iowa State University  Walter H. Dabney  ( http://hbcuconnections.iastatedigital.org/Walter_H._Dabney )

css.php