Dentistry, one of the world’s oldest medical professions with a history dating all the way back to 5000 B.C., wasn’t modernized until the 1700s. Throughout this period of modernization, African Americans experienced great difficulty in seeking dental care, and finding dentists of color proved to be even more difficult. It wouldn’t be until the 1800s when three dental pioneers — a former seamstress and two sons of former slaves — paved the way, setting groundbreaking strides in the field for black Americans. Those three individuals are Robert Tanner Freeman, George F. Grant and Ida Gray Nelson Rollins.
Dr. Robert Tanner Freeman, Washington, D.C. native and son of former slaves developed an interest in dentistry after working for mentor Dr. Henry Bliss Noble. After being rejected from two dental schools because of the color of his skin, Dr. Freeman went on to enroll at Harvard University’s School of Dentistry as a part of their inaugural class. He graduated in 1869, becoming the nation’s first African American dentist. Upon graduation, Robert opened his own practice in his hometown of Washington, D.C., until his death four years later in 1873.
Dr. Freeman
Like Dr. Freeman, Dr. George F. Grant was also the son of former slaves. He entered and graduated from Harvard University’s dental school in 1870, and went on to become not only the first African American faculty member of Harvard, working in their department of mechanical dentistry, but he made several contributions to cleft palette procedures. Aside from dentistry and instructing, Dr. Grant also invented the wooden golf tee.
Dr. Ida Gray Nelson Rollins became the first African American female dentist in 1890. A former seamstress, who later began working under Dr. Jonathan Taft for three years, studying for entrance exams. Enrolling in the University Of Michigan School Of Dentistry in 1887, Dr. Rollins graduated in 1890. She then relocated to Cincinnati, becoming the first African American woman to own a dental practice there. And in 1895, after marrying James Sanford Nelson, Ida relocated to, and opened a dental practice in, Chicago, becoming the first African American woman to do so.
Dr. Rollins
In the years since Dr. Freeman, Dr. Grant, and Dr. Rollins’ pioneering efforts in the dental field, African Americans have not only continued carrying the torch that was lit by the ones who have come before them, but found ways to expand their reach in other areas. There’s Dr. Robert F. Boyd, a physician and dentist, became the first president of the National Medical Association. Dr. C.O. Simpkins, dentist, civil rights activist, politician, and one of the founders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Dr. George Simkins, Jr., dentist and community leader, and civil rights activist. Dr. Annie Elizabeth Delany, civil rights pioneer and second black woman to become a licensed dentist in New York. And Dr. Robert Lee, American dentist who later relocated to Ghana to become and elder statesman and unofficial ambassador to African Americans traveling to Ghana. Throughout the evolution of dental practices over the years, African Americans have found a way to use their platform to continue breaking barriers, effecting change, and leading the charge for equality in the field of dentistry and beyond.
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Read the original article:
https://www.ada.org/en/publications/new-dentist-news/2020-archive/february/celebrating-black-history-month-trailblazers-in-dentistry
Published February 24, 2020