Patterson, Frederick D. (“Pat”) (D.V.M., 1923; M.S., Agriculture, 1927)

Headshot of Frederick D Patterson

By Brad Kuennen, Iowa State University Vet Med and Animal Science Librarian

Born October 10, 1901, in Washington, D.C., Patterson was the youngest of six children born to William Ross and Mamie Brooks Patterson. Tragically, both of his parents would die from illness before Patterson turned two years old.

When his oldest sister, Wilhelmina, graduated from the Washington Conservatory of Music sometime around 1908, she moved to Texas to start her career in music education taking young Frederick Patterson with her. She worked at several different schools in Texas and Oklahoma, and used any extra money she had to pay for her brother’s education. Eventually she landed a job teaching music at Prairie View State Normal School and Industrial College (now Prairie View A&M University) and Patterson, who had been staying with relatives up to this point, moved in with her and enrolled at the school.

It was at Prairie View that Patterson first became interested in veterinary medicine. During his junior and senior years, Patterson spent many hours with the young school veterinarian, Edward B. Evans, who had just earned his DVM from Iowa State College (now University). He encouraged Patterson to pursue a career in veterinary medicine and recommended Iowa State to him. 

Patterson arrived in Ames, Iowa, during the late summer of 1919 and enrolled at Iowa State. Four years later, in the spring of 1923, he had earned his DVM. He accepted a position teaching agriculture at Virginia State College and worked there for nearly five years. While at Virginia State, Patterson received a fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation General Education Board to pursue an advanced degree. He was granted leave from his teaching position and returned to Iowa State where he completed his M.S. in veterinary pathology in 1927. He returned to Virginia to take up his teaching role again, but was soon contacted by Tuskegee Institute (now University) about a teaching position there.

Patterson accepted the position to teach agriculture and animal science courses and also to act as the school’s veterinarian. He was again offered a fellowship by the Rockefeller Foundation General Education Board to pursue an advanced degree and this time chose Cornell University, where he completed his Ph.D. in bacteriology in 1932. Shortly after returning to Tuskegee, the Director of the Agriculture Division was murdered, and Patterson was put in charge of the agriculture program. When President Robert Moton announced his retirement, the Tuskegee Board of Trustees tapped Patterson to serve as the third president of the school. At his inauguration ceremony that fall, Patterson had just turned 34.

During Patterson’s tenure as president, Tuskegee would face severe budget problems due to the Depression and then a World War. However, he managed to grow the academic programs at the school, oversaw the transition of Tuskegee from a technical institute to an academically diverse university, and established a different approach to fundraising which positively impacted nearly all historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in the country. 

With the assistance of his mentor, Edward B. Evans, and a team of dedicated instructors, Patterson established Tuskegee’s School of Veterinary Medicine in 1945. It remains the only school of veterinary medicine at an HBCU and is estimated to have trained 70 percent of African American veterinarians in the United States. In addition, Patterson established a commercial aviation program in 1939, giving students the opportunity to earn a commercial pilots license. The school would also be home to a military aviation training program during the war whose pilots, the famed Tuskegee Airmen, would earn a stellar record and reputation. During his tenure, Patterson also oversaw the creation of the school of engineering and the program in commercial dietetics.

Sources

Biography available at  HBCU Connections at Iowa State University  Frederick D. Patterson ( http://hbcuconnections.iastatedigital.org/Frederick_D._Patterson

Evans, Edward Bertram  (D.V.M., 1918)

Headshot of Edward Bertram Evans

Based on research by Brad Kuennen, Iowa State University Vet Med and Animal Science Librarian

From Kansas City, MO.

Edward Bertram Evans was born in Kansas City, Missouri, son of Edward G. Evans I and Ada M. Howard Evans, on 10 May 1894, according to his WW I Draft Card.

Evans and Samuel A. Richardson hold the distinction of being the second and third Black graduates from the Iowa State University College of Veterinary Medicine, graduating in the class of 1918. Evans served as 2nd Lieutenant in the U.S. Army during World War I. He was also a member of the Veterinary Medical Society as a student.

After his graduation from Iowa State, Evans returned to his native Texas where he was hired as a veterinarian and instructor at Prairie View A&M College (now University) northwest of Houston where he established a Veterinary Medicine Department. It was at Prairie View where Evans became a mentor to Frederick Douglass Patterson and encouraged him to pursue veterinary medicine at Iowa State. 

He was the first licensed Black veterinarian in Texas. (According to the State Fair of Texas Agriculture Hall of Honor https://bigtex.com/supporting-texans/agriculture/hall-of-honor/). In 1941, he was put in charge of all Black extension work in Texas.

In 1945, when Patterson was president of Tuskegee University, he called upon Evans to assist in establishing a veterinary school. Evans served as the first Dean of the Tuskegee School of Veterinary Medicine before being called back the following year to serve as Prairie View’s eighth president, serving in this role from 1946 to 1967.

Evans was a national leader in extension work at historically black colleges and universities. He led the development of a national school at Prairie View to train Black county and home agents and other extension workers for the South. He reorganized Prairie View in 1951, expanding it into a full Land Grant college. Evans served as a State Department Point IV consultant  in 1952 and 1953 where he helped develop a program for livestock disease control and greater food production in North Africa and the Middle East. For all these accomplishments and more, Evans was one of two men named Progressive Farmer magazine’s 1953 Man of the Year in Service to Southern Agriculture.

Edwards B. Evans passed away on 3 July 1976 in Houston, TX, and is buried in Prairie View, TX, where his career began.

Sources

Photo Credit: Prairie View A&M University (1926)

1926 The Prairie(p.32)

Biography available at  HBCU Connections at Iowa State University  Edward B. Evans  ( http://hbcuconnections.iastatedigital.org/Edward_B._Evans )

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