The Black Heroes of Mathematics (2024)

As part of Black History Month, Dr Nira Chamberlain has produced a presentation which celebrates black mathematicians from history.

“As Black people we have had more than our share of the academically hereditary disaffection all people seem to experience relative to mathematics…Nowadays our promising youth are even more menacingly threatened by exposure to teachers…who have been convinced that Blacks…are abysmally and irrevocably hopeless as far as mathematics is concerned.”

Dr Wade Ellis Sr: 1980 (1909-1989)
10
th African-American to gain a PhD in Mathematics

Francis William: 1702 – 1770, Jamaican Mathematician

The Black Heroes of Mathematics (1)

Mathematics Degree -Cambridge University

Background

Francis Williams was selected to take part in a social experiment devised by the Duke of Montagu who wished to show that black individuals – with the right education – could match the intellectual achievements of whites.

Challenge

A rival once suggested-”The abstruse problems of mathematical institution turned his brain; and he still remains, I believe, an unfortunate example, to show that every African head is not adapted by nature to such profound contemplations.”

Achievements

Degree in Mathematics, Latin and Literature from Cambridge University. He returned to Jamaica to set up a school, teaching Mathematics, Latin, Reading and Writing.

Thomas Fuller 1710 – 1790, Slave and Mathematician

The Black Heroes of Mathematics (2)Extraordinary powers of calculation

Background

Thomas Fuller , known as the Virginia Calculator, was kidnapped from his native Africa at the age of fourteen and sold to a planter.

Challenge

He was regularly tested. On being asked, “ How many seconds a man has lived who is 70 years, 17 days and 12 hours old?” He answered in a minute and a half 2 210 500 800. One of his examiners who was using pen and paper, advise him his answer
was incorrect! The sum was not so great as he had suggested. Upon which Thomas hastily replied: “Stop, you forget all the
leap years! “ On adding the amount of the seconds for the leap years, the total in both their sums agreed exactly.

Achievements

Later in his life was he was discovered by antislavery campaigners, who used him as a role model to demonstrate that blacks were not mentally inferior to whites.

Benjamin Banneker: 1731 – 1806, Astronomer and Civil Rights Leader

The Black Heroes of Mathematics (3)

The sky was not his limit

Background

Benjamin Banneker was a largely self-educated mathematician, astronomer and first civil rights leader.

Challenge

He would exchanged letters with the soon to be Third U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, whom had stated that negroes are inferior to whites when it comes to high level of mathematical thinking.

Achievements

Banneker was the first scientist to study the relativity of time and space, and his revelations on the topic preceded Einstein’s
Theory of Relativity by two centuries. He successfully predicted the solar eclipse that occurred on April 14, 1789, contradicting the forecasts of prominent mathematicians and astronomers of the day. Banneker was the first to disclose in his writings that the Star of Sirius is two stars rather than one. His hypothesis was not confirmed until the event of the Hubble Telescope two and a half centuries later at NASA.

Elbert Cox : 1895 – 1969, 1st Black Mathematics PhD

The Black Heroes of Mathematics (4)The Pioneer

Background

After fighting for his country in World War I , Elbert Cox, applied for a PhD program. One of his referees wrote “ He would have certain difficulties, because of the fact, he is of the coloured race.”

Challenge

Universities in England and Germany would not recognise his PhD at the time. However, Japan’s Imperial University of San Dei accepted the dissertation.

Achievements

In 1929, became the first Black Mathematician in the world to gain a PhD in Mathematics. From 1929-1961, he taught at
Howard, an Historically Black College and University. Inspiring generations of Black Mathematicians to obtain a PhD

Euphemia Lofton Haynes: 1890 – 1980, 1st Black Female Mathematics PhD

The Black Heroes of Mathematics (5)

The Overcomer

Background

Euphemia Lofton Haynes faced three obstacles in becoming a PhD mathematician. She was female, she was Black and she was in her 50’s.

Challenge

In 1940 the Cambridge Mathematician G.H. Hardy, wrote A Mathematician’s Apology, one of the most widely read books about the nature and practice of mathematics. It stated: “No mathematician should ever allow himself to forget that mathematics, more than any other art or science, is a young man’s game.“

Achievements

Three years after Hardy’s book, Euphemia Lofton Haynes completed her PhD in Mathematics. She was living proof that you are never too old and that mathematics is not just for the few, it is for everybody

Further Reading:

Article by Dr Nira Chamberlain

The Black Heroes of Mathematics (2024)

FAQs

What math equation did the black girls solve? ›

Meet Calcea Johnson and Ne'Kiya Jackson. These two young Black students are mathematical prodigies who attended St. Mary's Academy in New Orleans. They are history-making teens who solved and showed proof of the age-old math giant, the Pythagorean Theorem ( a² + b² = c²).

Who is considered the 1st black mathematician in American history? ›

Benjamin Banneker (1731-1806) is often recognized as the first African American mathematician; however, ex-slave Thomas Fuller's (1710-1790) and the Nigerian Muhammad ibn Muhammad's (16??-1741) activities predate Benjamin Banneker. None of these men had formal degrees.

What two high school girls solve 2000 year old math problem? ›

Enter Calcea Johnson and Ne'kiya Jackson

When these two girls did what the masses have not been able to do for centuries, the world was stunned. It was rocked at its core because a seemingly unsolvable math problem was suddenly solved five times over, as they have discovered not one, but five trigonometric proofs.

Who was the first black woman mathematician? ›

Born in the segregated south of 1918, Katherine Johnson was a trailblazer from day one. Not only was she one of the first Black students to integrate West Virginia's graduate schools, she went on to become a NASA mathematician—sending astronauts into orbit, around the Earth, and to the moon.

What is the hardest math equation in history? ›

For decades, a math puzzle has stumped the smartest mathematicians in the world. x3+y3+z3=k, with k being all the numbers from one to 100, is a Diophantine equation that's sometimes known as "summing of three cubes." When there are two or more unknowns, as is the case here, only the integers are studied.

What is the most famous unsolved equation? ›

World's Most Puzzling Unsolved Math Problems
  1. Riemann Hypothesis. ...
  2. Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture. ...
  3. Hodge Conjecture. ...
  4. Navier-Stokes Equations. ...
  5. Yang-Mills Existence and Mass Gap. ...
  6. P vs NP Problem. ...
  7. Collatz Conjecture.

What is the hardest math problem never solved? ›

Math problems like the Poincaré conjecture and Fermat's last theorem took centuries to solve. However, others like the Riemann hypothesis and Goldbach's conjecture still haunt mathematicians and inspire new generations to find solutions. Here we take a look at some of the hardest unsolved problems in math.

What is the 350 year old math problem? ›

French mathematician Pierre de Fermat first wrote his theorem in the margins of his copy of an old Greek text called Arithmetica in 1637. The theorem states that no equation of the form x^n + y^n = z^n has a whole-number solution when n is greater than two.

What is the hardest year of math in high school? ›

Generally speaking, the most rigorous math courses in high school include Advanced Placement (AP) Calculus AB and BC, AP Statistics, and for some, Multivariable Calculus (which might be offered at your school or at a local college).

What was Katherine Johnson's IQ? ›

Katherine Johnson had an IQ of around 162.

Who was the female mathematician murdered? ›

Hypatia is famous for being the greatest mathematician and astronomer of her time, for being the leader of the Neoplatonist school of philosophy in Alexandria, for spectacularly overcoming the profound sexism of her society, and for suffering a violent death at the hands of ignorant zealots.

When did NASA stop segregation? ›

In 1958, when the NACA made the transition to NASA, segregated facilities, including the West Computing office, were abolished.

What equation did George Dantzig solve? ›

Dantzig's solution method, later known as the Simplex Algorithm, was an elegant mathematical approach that solved linear programming problems efficiently and effectively.

What math was used in hidden figures? ›

As told in the book (and movie) Hidden Figures, Katherine Johnson led the team of African-American women who did the actual calculation of the necessary trajectory from the earth to the moon for the US Apollo space program. They used Euler's method to do this.

Who solved the million dollar math problem? ›

A proof of this conjecture, together with the more powerful geometrization conjecture, was given by Grigori Perelman in 2002 and 2003. Perelman's solution completed Richard Hamilton's program for the solution of the geometrization conjecture, which he had developed over the course of the preceding twenty years.

What did Julia Robinson discover in math? ›

AS A MATHEMATICIAN, Julia Bowman Robinson will long be remembered for her many important contributions to questions of algorithmic solvability and unsolvability of mathematical problems, in particular for her part in the negative solution of Hilbert's "Tenth Problem." And, despite her expressed wish, she will be ...

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