Calloway, Nathaniel Oglesby (B.S., Chemistry, 1930; Ph.D., Chemistry, 1933)

Headshot of Nathaniel Oglesby Calloway

Nathaniel Ogelsby Calloway was born in Tuskegee, Alabama, on 10 October 1907, as one of the five children of James N. Calloway and Marietta (aka Mary E., aka Mamie) Oglesby Calloway. His father had been enslaved when young but had gone on to receive a college degree. Calloway began his studies at Iowa State College in 1926, working toward a Bachelor’s of Science in Organic Chemistry, which he received in 1930. During those undergraduate years, he was a member of the ISC Debate Team. Following his B.S. he enrolled in the Organic Chemistry Ph.D. program at Iowa State, working with Dr. Henry Gilman. Calloway earned his Doctorate in Organic Chemistry in 1933, becoming the first African American to receive a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Iowa State. He maintained regular contact with Dr. Gilman via correspondence after completing his degree. Many of those letters are in the Gilman papers in Iowa State University Special Collections. While attending ISC, Calloway lived at 1204 3rd Street, the Walter G. Madison home; 218 Lincoln Way, the Archie and Nancy Martin House; and 2928 Wood Street, the home of ISC alumna Willa Juanita Ewing’s family, the Charles Anthonys.

Dr. Calloway married Henriette Mabel Fulton of Des Moines, Iowa, on 29 August 1933. After graduating, he became a chemistry professor and then Head of the Department of Chemistry at Tuskegee Institute from 1933 to 1935. According to a letter from fellow Iowa State alumnus A. C. Aldridge, Dr. Calloway was present at the inaugural event for Tuskegee’s new President, Frederick D. Patterson, ISC class of 1921 and 1927. In 1936, Dr. Calloway took up a position as an Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Fisk University which he held until 1940. In 1939, he started looking seriously for jobs in industry, because marital problems led to his position being difficult at Fisk with its strict Quaker administration (Calloway, 1939). Following his divorce from his first wife, Calloway married three more times, his last wife being the former Mary Ann Borucki (“Dr. Calloway Dead” 9). 

Calloway, seeing no opportunities for advancement at Fisk, left the university in 1940, taking up graduate coursework in the University of Chicago’s Pharmacology Department (Calloway, 1940). His work at the University of Chicago went well initially, though Calloway expressed frustration with how little chemistry was actually involved in Pharmacology. In 1941 he won a 2-quarter fellowship in Pharmacology, was able to be employed during the summer full-time to earn money, and then received an assistantship that allowed him to teach in Pharmacology the next school year (Calloway, 1941). By spring 1943, however, the racism present at the school had begun to chafe; he “ran into so much racial prejudice at Chicago University in regard to clinical facilities” that he decided to leave the school for one “more liberal in its attitude” (Calloway, 1943). He graduated with his M.D. from the University of Illinois Medical School in December 1943.

After that, Dr. Calloway went on to be an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Illinois in the 1950s and early 1960s; Chief of Medical Service at the Tomah, Wisconsin, Veterans Administration Hospital from 1963-1966; and the Madison, Wisconsin, General Hospital, from 1966 until his death on 3 December 1979. When not engaged in medical work, Dr. Calloway was a leader in the African American community in Chicago and nationally. According to Notable Black American Scientists, “his role in reorganizing the Chicago chapter of the Urban League [as its President from 1955 to 1959]…helped transform it from an embarrassment for the national organization to one of its most successful chapters” (Krapp, 1998, p. 54). He later served as the National Director of the Urban League from 1959-1962. When he became a Lecturer in the Afro-American Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1970, “his…teachings on genetics and race…helped debunk racist notions of white superiority” (Krapp, 1998, p. 54); Calloway argued that “Often what are called racial differences are social and economic differences” (Krapp, 1998, p. 55). Also in 1970, Iowa State University honored Dr. Calloway with a Distinguished Alumni Award. Unfortunately, Calloway’s life was not without controversy. He was ousted from his Urban League Directorship for distancing the organization from early 1960s’ activism, and later, being accused of over-prescribing dangerous drugs to his patients in Madison (Krapp, 1998).

Because of his family’s long association with Tuskegee University, Dr. Nathaniel Calloway is buried in the university cemetery.

Iowa State College dissertation title: Condensation reactions of furfural and its derivatives

Iowa State University Library permalink: https://doi.org/10.31274/rtd-180813-14731

Sources

Calloway, Nathaniel. (1939). Gilman letter, 5 January 1939, Henry Gilman Papers, Iowa State University Special Collections Department, RS 13/6/52, Box 8, folder 8/12.

Calloway, Nathaniel. (1940). Gilman letter, 9 October 1940, Henry Gilman Papers, Iowa State University Special Collections Department, RS 13/6/52, Box 8, folder 8/12.

Calloway, Nathaniel. (1941). Gilman letter, 13 August 1941. Henry Gilman Papers, Iowa State University Special Collections Department, RS 13/6/52, Box 8, folder 8/12.

Calloway, Nathaniel. (1943). Gilman letter, 15 June 1943. Henry Gilman Papers, Iowa State University Special Collections Department, RS 13/6/52, Box 8, folder 8/12.

Dr. Calloway dead at 72. (1979, December 13). Tuskegee News. p 9. Accessed 4 January 2022.  http://tkg.stparchive.com/Archive/TKG/TKG12131979P09.php  

Krapp, Kristine M., ed. (1998) Nathaniel Oglesby Calloway, in Notable Black American scientists, Gale/Cengage Learning. pp. 54-56.

Biography available at  HBCU Connections at Iowa State University  Nathaniel O. Calloway    http://hbcuconnections.iastatedigital.org/Nathaniel_O._Calloway 

Photo Credit:  https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/calloway-nathaniel-oglesby-1907-1979/

Mark, Jesse Jarue (M.S., Agriculture, 1931; Ph.D., Botany, 1935) 

Jesse Jarue Mark, Jr., was born 24 September 1905, in Apple Springs, Trinity County, Texas, to Jesse James Mark, Sr., a farmer, and his wife Lula V. Mark. Mark graduated from Prairie View State Normal & Industrial College (now Prairie View A & M University) in Prairie View, Texas, in 1929 and moved quickly on to Master’s Degree work in Agriculture at ISC, which he completed in 1931. While at ISC, Mark lived with Archie and Nancy Martin at 218 Lincoln Way

As early as 1931, Mark was teaching agriculture at Kentucky State Industrial College (now Kentucky State University), where fellow Iowa Stater Rufus B. Atwood was president. While working at Kentucky State, Mark pursued his Ph.D. in Botany, receiving it in 1935. That same year Mark’s work was recognized nationally when he was named a Rockefeller Fellow in Agriculture for 1935-36.

While at Iowa State, Mark had been employed at the Agricultural Experiment Station. He continued his ties to that organization while teaching and researching at Kentucky State, later becoming the Head of the Agriculture Department there. Following his teaching there, Mark also taught at Tennessee State College, Texas College, and Southern University of New Orleans. Mark He ended his career teaching biology there (“Dr. Mark Rites”).

Jesse Jarue Mark died at age 65 on 20 February 1971 and is buried in the Nigton Memorial Park Cemetery in Nigton, Texas.

Iowa State College Thesis Title: The relation of root reserves to cold resistance in alfalfa, 1935

Iowa State University Library Digital Repository Link:https://doi.org/10.31274/rtd-180813-14899; 

Iowa State College Dissertation Title: The response of winter grains to late fall seeding, 1931 

Iowa State University Catalog Record:https://iowa-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/12tutg/01IASU_ALMA21210594870002756

Sources

Romm, Harry J. (B.S., Zoology, 1930; M.S., Entomology, 1934; Ph.D. Plant Morphology, 1946)

Headshot of Harry J Romm

Harry J. Romm was born 4 Sept 1899 in Navasota, TX, to Benno Romm, born in Schwarzenau, Germany, and a mother from Tennessee.

Romm was still enrolled in public school at age 19 when he registered for the WWI draft in 1918, later graduating from Galveston Central High School, Galveston, Texas. In 1920, according to the Federal Census, Romm was employed as a porter in a dry goods store in Galveston. He married Fannie B. Dunlap in Dallas, Texas, on 11 June 1927 and was listed in 1928 Dallas City Directory as a teacher.

Moving to Ames in 1923, Romm earned his B.S. in Zoology in 1930, M.S. in Entomology in 1934. In 1935, Romm was an attendee at the banquet held by the Iowa State Alumni Association for Frederick D. Patterson’s inauguration as President of Tuskegee where he was listed as the Head of Department of Biology at Tuskegee Institute. While at Tuskegee, he served as a Volunteer Weather Collector for NOAA, a position that was held prior by George Washington Carver. During WWII, he served as a Principal Correspondent for the Army Specialist Corps.

Romm went on to earn his Ph.D. in Plant Morphology in 1946 and was later listed as teaching Biology at Southern University, Louisiana, in 1952. He died on 15 November 1955 and is buried in Lakeview Cemetery, Galveston, Texas. His headstone suggests he was a Catholic.

Iowa State College Dissertation Title: The development and structure of the vegetative and reproductive organs of kudzu, Pueraria thunbergiana (Sieb and Zucc) Benth; The insect depredators of purslane (Portulaca oleracea L.), 1946 

Iowa State University Catalog Record:https://quicksearch.lib.iastate.edu/permalink/01IASU_INST/q0r84t/cdi_proquest_journals_301851928 

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