Ross, Addie Lee (M.S., Home Economics Education, 1932)

Addie Lee Ross earned a master’s degree in Home Economics Education from Iowa State College in 1932. After graduation, she became a faculty member of the home economics department at Prairie View State Normal & Industrial College (now Prairie View A&M University) in Texas.

Iowa State College Dissertation Title: Development of the vocational home economics program for negroes in Mississippi, 1932

Iowa State University Catalog Record:https://quicksearch.lib.iastate.edu/permalink/01IASU_INST/174tg9m/alma990009056960102756 

Sources

Biography available at  HBCU Connections at Iowa State University  Addie L. Ross  ( http://hbcuconnections.iastatedigital.org/Addie_L._Ross )

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

Otis (sometimes Oatis), Jesse Rodgers Delbert  (B.S. , Animal Husbandry, 1925)

Headshot of Jesse R.D. Otis

Jesse Rodgers Delbert Otis was born in Carson, Mississippi, on 9 July 1899 to Delbert Otis and his wife, Anna Sims Otis, farmers. Jesse attended school in Piney Woods, Mississippi, and, then, in Three Oaks, Michigan, where he was the lone Black student in a class of 37. Otis’s farming background served him well in Michigan, where he lived with a local farmer and dairy owner, working as a farmhand, dairyman, and milk delivery boy to earn his keep (Johnson, 2021).

At ISC Jesse Otis studied Animal Husbandry, graduating with a B.S. in 1925. He was active in the Agriculture Club on campus and also as a member of the Alpha-Nu Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity in 1923, belonging alongside Iowa State brothers A.C. Aldridge, J. G. Trice, FD. Patterson, L. A. Potts, J. L. Lockett, J. W. Fraser, and R. B. Atwood (Aldridge, 1923). In 1935, Otis reunited with many of his fraternity brothers at a ISC Alumni Banquet at Tuskegee to celebrate the inauguration of brother Frederick D. Patterson as President of Tuskegee Institute. Otis had been teaching at Tuskgee since around 1928, when he left his teaching job at Piney Woods School after three years. He stayed at Tuskegee for the next seven years (Johnson, 2021). In 1933, Otis earned an M.S. in Agriculture and Life Sciences from Cornell University. He eventually received his Ph.D. in the same field in 1944 from the same institution.

The years between arriving at Tuskegee and taking the position of President of Mississippi’s Alcorn Agricultural and Mechanical College (now Alcorn State University) in 1946 saw Dr. Otis firmly establish himself in the field of agriculture as an expert and a teacher. According to the Alabama 4-H Center’s “In Remembrance” page, “From 1932 to 1934, he served as Specialist in Extension farm work. The next ten years found him in the nation’s capital working at the Department of Interior. Desiring to be back closer to the people he hoped to help, Dr. Otis held the position of Alabama State Leader for Negro Work from 1944 to 1946. In 1946 Dr. Otis was selected to be president of Alcorn College for Negroes at Alcorn, Mississippi” (n.d.).

Dr. Otis served as president at Alcorn A&M until 1957, when Mississippi Governor Coleman removed him from his post following a multi-week student boycott sparked by an Alcorn history professor who “wrote a series of articles for the Jackson State Times linking the NAACP to communism and criticizing Congressman Adam Clayton Powell” (Johnson, 2021).

J. R. D. Otis returned to Tuskegee Institute to finish his career as the Director of the School of Education. He married Frankie Althalyn Williams on 25 July 1959 and remained married to her until is death 3 January 1970. He is buried at Oaklawn Memorial Cemetery in Mobile, Alabama.

Sources

Photo Credit: Iowa State University. (1925). 1925 Bomb v.32 special edition, p.72. Retrieved from    https://n2t.net/ark:/87292/w9rp82 

Aldridge, A. C. (1923, June). “Alpha Nu Chapter State College of Iowa, Des Moines, Iowa.” The Sphinx, 9.3, p. 17.

In remembrance…Jesse R. Otis (1899-1970). (n.d.) Alabama 4-H Center. Retrieved from  https://alabama4hcenter.org/jesse-r-otis/ 

Johnson, David. (2021, February 17). 1940s Three Oaks class project reveals the story of Jesse Otis. Harbor country news. Retrieved from  https://www.harborcountry-news.com/features/1940s-three-oaks-class-project-reveals-the-story-of-jesse-otis/article_24f6c234-eca6-5d66-9d33-486bd86eeeef.html 

Hardy, John Garrick  (M.S., Vocational Guidance, 1933)

Headshot of John Garrick Hardy

John Garrick Hardy was born 16 November 1909 in Baldwin County, Alabama, to John Hardy and Pinkie Sommerville Hardy. In 1933, shortly after John earned his Master’s degree in Vocational Guidance from Iowa State College after only nine months in the program, he began teaching at Alabama State Teachers College (now Alabama State University) in Montgomery, Alabama, the institution where he taught for forty-six years (“Archive Record,” n.d., para. 4). Prior to attending ISC, he had earned a Bachelor’s of Science degree from that same school. In 1935, Hardy joined other Iowa Staters at the banquet held by the Iowa State Alumni Association for Frederick D. Patterson’s inauguration as President of Tuskegee. Four years later, Hardy married Mildred Elizabeth Motley on 25 December 1939 in Autauga, Alabama.

In 1946, with a completed Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin, Dr. Hardy became “the first Black in the State of Alabama, who graduated from an all Black Public State supported institution of higher learning, to receive a Master’s degree (Iowa State University) and a Ph.D. degree (University of Wisconsin)” (“Archive Record,” n.d., para. 4). In recognition of his long-time impact on Alabama State and its students, Dr. Hardy received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree in the spring of 1977 (“Archive Record,” n.d., para. 4).

He ended his career as the head of the Sociology Department at Alabama State. The John Garrick Hardy University Center at Alabama State is named for him. His life was marked by a strong record of community service and commitment to bettering the lives of others. Dr. John Garrick Hardy passed away on 9 November 1986. He is buried in the Remount Park Cemetery in Montgomery, Alabama.

Iowa State College Dissertation Title: A study of the vocational intentions of negro students in fourteen city high schools in Alabama, 1933 

Iowa State University Catalog Record:https://iowa-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/12tutg/01IASU_ALMA21201769240002756

Sources

Photo credit: Archive record: Dr. John Garrick Hardy Collection. (n.d.) Levi Watkins Learning Center. Alabama State University. Retrieved from  https://alasu.pastperfectonline.com/archive/6AA61ED5-D87C-4710-96C1-385424122018 

Archive record: Dr. John Garrick Hardy Collection. (n.d.) Levi Watkins Learning Center. Alabama State University. Retrieved from  https://alasu.pastperfectonline.com/archive/6AA61ED5-D87C-4710-96C1-385424122018

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