Centennial Feature
First Black Veterinarian at Kansas State Agricultural College (KSAC)
John William Brown,
1912
The first black veterinarian to earn his DVM degree at Kansas State
Agricultural College (KSAC) entered college at the age of sixteen.
He had previously attended Fort Scott High School in Bourbon County,
Kansas. Dr. Brown was head of the Division of Agricultural
Instruction at the Tuskegee Institute, Alabama, during 1912 and
1913.
Eighteen men received their DVM degrees on Thursday, June 13, 1912,
and one received his diploma on December 18, 1912.
The Tuskegee Connection - excerpt from the upcoming KSU CVM Centennial History Book, Co-authored by Drs. Ronnie Elmore and Howard Erickson
The following individuals
have played a prominent role in the development of the veterinary
program at Tuskegee University.
Dr. Booker T. Washington founded Tuskegee Institute in 1881.
Veterinary medicine at Tuskegee Institute began as a discipline in
the Department of Agriculture in 1896. In 1942, the Tuskegee
Institute Board of Trustees approved a program of cooperation with
the State of Alabama to offer professional work in veterinary
medicine. Dr. Patterson selected Dr. E.B. Evans, his idol and
mentor, as the school’s first dean. Dr. Evans was the College
Veterinarian and Director of the Department of Agriculture at
Prairie View College, Texas.
Of the first eight faculty members recruited by Dr. Evans in 1945,
three were graduates from the Kansas State College of Veterinary
Medicine: Drs. Thomas G. Perry (KSU 1921), Theodore S. Williams (KSU
1935), and Lloyd B. Mobiley (KSU 1938). These faculty were soon
joined by other KSU graduates: Drs. Eugene W. Adams (KSU 1944),
Raymond C. Williams (KSU 1946), Walter C. Bowie (KSU 1947), and Earl
H. Brown (KSU 1947).
(Read more in the upcoming "A Century of Excellence" history book.