I have been for many years a loyal reader of the Lawyers, Guns, and Money blog, but don’t usually expect them to be writing about things of professional interest to me. But back in November, Erik Loomis had a nice mini-biography of Kelly Miller:
Born into slavery in 1863 in Winnsboro, South Carolina, Miller grew up in relatively decent circumstances it seems. His father was already a freed man from Charleston and being free during the Civil War generally meant that you were a skilled laborer and probably had access to better jobs than most ex-slaves would get. In any case, Miller was able to get a good education, something certainly not available to most freed slaves. The Presbyterians opened a school for freedpeople called Fairfield Institute and Miller attended in beginning in 1878. That led him to Howard University in 1882. He was very good at mathematics and that led to a job offer at the U.S. Naval Observatory under the leadership of an English mathematician named Edgar Frisby, who was a naval captain. He continued to impress everyone he ran into and so he was soon moved to Johns Hopkins University for more advanced study and he went to school there in 1887 and 1888. This made Miller the first Black graduate student in mathematics in American history.
Super interesting! Miller became a professor of mathematics at Howard, but later moved to the sociology department, where he stayed until he died in 1939.
Then a few weeks later I saw this excellent bio by Johnny L. Houston in the Notices of the AMS of Elbert Frank Cox:
In 1925, Elbert Frank Cox became the first known African American to earn a PhD in mathematics. In fact, he is the first known Black person in the world to earn a PhD in mathematics. His PhD was awarded by Cornell University. It is interesting to note that Cox was the second Black person to earn a PhD from Cornell University in any discipline. The first, Thomas Wyatt Turner, had earned his PhD in biology four years earlier. During this time, it was hard for a nonwhite person to get admitted or get a degree from almost any R1-University in the US. However, Cox had done his homework. Cox was aware of Turner’s degree, and Cox was aware that in 1890, Cornell had awarded a BS degree in STEM to Jane Eleanor “Nellie” Datcher, its first Black female graduate. Just as important, Cox knew that the founder and the first president of Cornell University made sure that Cornell would be a perfect fit for students like Cox.
…
Dr. Cox was a member of the mathematics faculty at Howard from 1929 until his retirement in 1966. During his tenure at Howard, he served as associate professor and full professor of mathematics. In addition to mathematics, Dr. Cox had extensive training in physics. When Howard merged the mathematics and physics departments in 1957, Dr. Cox was requested to serve as department chair again. He served in this last chair position from 1957 to 1961. Prior to this, he had twice earlier served as chair of mathematics at Howard.
So the two overlapped at Howard for a decade (although no evidence in either piece that they had any significant interactions).
I don’t have anything to add about this I just found both pieces interesting.

