Angie Lena Turner King (1905-2004)

March 13, 2012 
/ Contributed By: Sibrina Collins

Angie Turner King (Wikipedia)|West Virginia counties

Angie Turner King|West Virginia counties

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Born in Elkhorn, West Virginia in 1905, Angie Lena Turner King was a chemist and mathematician who dedicated her life and career to teaching and mentoring students in the sciences. The eldest daughter of William and Laura Turner, Angie had two siblings, Sylvia and Irving.

Turner graduated in 1923 from Bluefield Colored Institute (a training high school that became Bluefield State College) in Bluefield, West Virginia. She then studied chemistry and mathematics and earned her BS degree (cum laude) in 1927 from West Virginia State College (WVSC), a Historically Black College and University (HCBU) located in Institute, West Virginia. She taught mathematics at the Teacher-Training High School of WVSC for eight years and eventually was offered a teaching position on the WVSC college faculty. She taught and mentored many African American students at WVSC including Jasper Brown Jeffries, a physicist and mathematician who would later work on the Manhattan Project in World War II. Jeffries earned his BS in 1933 from WVSU.

Turner continued her education and in 1931 earned an MS degree in chemistry from Cornell University under the direction of Professor Thomas R. Briggs. The title of her thesis was “Interactions Between Solutions of Tannic Acid and Hydrous Ferric Oxide.” She then returned to the faculty at WCSC.

During World War II, Turner taught soldiers in the Army Specialized Training Program at WVSC. In 1946 Angie Turner married Robert Elemore King. They had five daughters. Angie King continued her graduate studies in the field of education at the University of Pittsburgh under the direction of Dr. John A. Nietz. In 1955 she earned her doctoral degree. King spent her entire college teaching career at West Virginia State University and retired from the institution in 1980.

Dr. King continued to live in her on-campus house at WVSC. She died on February 28, 2004 in Institute, West Virginia. She was 99.

Author Profile

A proud native of Detroit, Michigan, Sibrina Collins is an organometallic chemist and earned her Ph.D. from The Ohio State University (2000) under the direction of Professor Bruce Bursten. Her research efforts focused on the low temperature matrix photochemistry of ruthenium cyclopentadienyl dicarbonyl dimers. She later completed a postdoc at Louisiana State University with Professor Isiah Warner. Between 2003 and 2006, Dr. Collins was an assistant professor of chemistry at Claflin University, Orangeburg, South Carolina. Her research efforts at Claflin University focused on the crystal-engineering of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), which have many potential applications as electronic materials. Dr. Collins has also worked as a writer and editor for the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Washington, DC. From May 2006 to May 2008, she served as the University of Washington Director of Graduate Diversity Recruiting and most recently a faculty member in the Department of Chemistry, The College of Wooster, Ohio from 2008-2014. At Wooster, Dr. Collins focused on the development of anticancer drugs containing transition metal centers. She is now Director of Education at The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, Michigan. In this new role, she focuses on the science education programming for the Wright Museum.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Collins, S. (2012, March 13). Angie Lena Turner King (1905-2004). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/king-angie-lena-turner-1905-2004/

Source of the Author's Information:

Harry Washington Greene, Holders of Doctorates Among American Negroes
(Boston: Meador Publishing, 1946); Angie Turner, “Interactions Between
Solutions of Tannic Acid and Hydrous Ferric Oxide,”  M.S. thesis,
Cornell University, 1931; Angie Turner King, “An Analysis of Early
Algebra Textbooks Used in the American Secondary Schools Before 1900,”
Ph.D. thesis, University of Pittsburgh, 1955; Wini Warren Black, Women
Scientists in the United States
(Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana
University Press, 1999);  Zeena Nackerdien, Black Women Scientists of
Underrepresented Role Models.
http://selections.rockefeller.edu/cms/science-and-society/black-women-scientists-studies-of-underrepresented-role-models.html;
West Virginia History.
http://www.wvculture.org/history/journal_wvh/wvh53-7.html.

Further Reading