Edward Alexander Bouchet (1852-1918)

January 18, 2007 
/ Contributed By: John H. McClendon III

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Edward Alexander Bouchet

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Edward Alexander Bouchet was born on September 15, 1852 in New Haven, Connecticut to William Francis and Susan Cooley Bouchet. Edward attended the segregated primary school in New Haven and later finished his secondary education at Hopkins Grammar School in 1870. An outstanding student, Edward’s academic accomplishments included serving as the valedictorian of his high school class.

The Bouchet family was quite prominent in New Haven’s small African American community. In addition to holding the position of deacon in the church, William Francis Bouchet was also employed at Yale College as a janitor and Susan did the laundry of Yale students. Well aware of Edward’s talent and scholarly ability, William and Susan had hoped their son would one day join the ranks of the Yale College student body. The fulfillment of this aspiration would be no small feat given the fact that no African American had ever attended Yale.

Consequently when he was admitted in 1870, Edward Bouchet became the first to break the “color line” at Yale College. Bouchet tackled a very challenging curriculum with courses in German, French, Greek and Latin. However, his main interests were in the sciences and mathematics. Bouchet took classes in mechanics, physics, and astronomy and earned in his first year the GPA of 3.36. Bouchet especially excelled in mathematics with a grade point average of 3.52, and received summa cum laude honors in all of his undergraduate studies upon graduation in 1874, sixth in his class. He was the first African American elected into the academic honor society Phi Beta Kappa, but his induction was delayed because Yale’s chapter was inactive for a number of years. By the time he was inducted in 1884, another African American, George Washington Henderson of the University of Vermont, had preceded him into the society.

Bouchet entered graduate school at Yale in 1874 and gained his doctorate in physics in just two years (1876). Although Bouchet was the first African American to earn a Ph.D. from an institution in the United States, he was not the first African American to receive this terminal degree. Patrick Francis Healy previously earned his Ph.D. in 1865 from the University of Louvain.

At Yale, Bouchet studied with some of the most outstanding professors in science. When he completed his doctoral dissertation on “Measuring Refractive Indices” Bouchet became one of only six people in the country with doctorates in physics. Despite his credentials and academic accomplishments, racism was a formidable roadblock to a career as a research scientist. Bouchet spent most of his career teaching and administrating segregated African American schools. After a long term illness, Edward Alexander Bouchet died on October 28, 1918 in New Haven, Connecticut.

Author Profile

Dr. John H. McClendon III, is Director of African American and African Studies and Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Michigan State University. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Black Studies and Political Science from Central State University and a Master’s and doctorate in philosophy from the University of Kansas. McClendon has taught at State University of New York at Binghamton, University of Illinois Champaign/Urbana, Eastern Illinois University, the University of Missouri-Columbia and Bates College. McClendon’s areas of expertise include African philosophy, Philosophy of African American Studies, Marxist philosophy, and the history of African American philosophers.

He is the author of C.L.R. James’s Notes on Dialectics: Left Hegelianism or Marxism-Leninism (Lexington Books 2005) and several monographs, reports, booklets and articles in noted anthologies. He has published widely in a number of journals including Afro-Americans in New York Life and History, Journal of Speculative Philosophy, Socialism and Democracy, The AME Church Review, Explorations in Ethnic Studies, Sage Race Relations Abstracts, Freedomways, American Philosophical Association Newsletter on Philosophy and the Black Experience, and Ethnic Studies Review among others. He is currently the Editor of the American Philosophical Association Newsletter Philosophy and the Black Experience, he serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of the journal Cultural Logic and is an Ex Officio Member of the Committee on Blacks in Philosophy—American Philosophical Association. McClendon has lectured widely throughout the country and abroad including in Toulouse, France and at the University of Havana in Cuba. Most recently this year, he was the keynote speaker for Black History Month at Mississippi State University, the Charles Phelps Taft lecturer for the 35th anniversary of the African-American Studies Department at the University of Cincinnati and served as a faculty member for the Schomburg-Mellon Humanities Summer Institute.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

McClendon III, J. (2007, January 18). Edward Alexander Bouchet (1852-1918). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/bouchet-edward-alexander-1852-1918/

Source of the Author's Information:

Ronald E. Mickens, “Bouchet and Imes: First Black Physicists” in Ronald E. Mickens, ed., The African American Presence in Physics (Atlanta, 1999), pp. 20-24; Garry L. Reeder, “The History of Blacks at Yale University,” The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, No. 26. (Winter, 1999-2000) pp. 125-126; “Yale Pays Tribute to Its First Black Graduate,” The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, No. 22. (Winter, 1998-1999), pp. 63-64.

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