Jane Hinton (1919-2003)

April 23, 2020 
/ Contributed By: Hilda Bastian

Jane Hinton

Jane Hinton

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Research scientist Jane Hinton was born on May 1, 1919 in Canton, Massachusetts. Her mother, Ada (Hawes) Hinton, was a former teacher, and her father, William Augustus Hinton, was a bacteriologist and one of the most prominent African American medical researchers of his era. In the 1920s, he developed a test for syphilis that was widely used until newer methods were developed after World War II. Augustus Hinton was the first African American to teach at Harvard Medical School and to write a medical textbook.

When she was six, Jane’s parents sent her and her sister to school in several countries Europe to ensure that they would have the best education available to black students at the time. Hinton returned to the United States in 1928, graduating from the high school at Montpelier Seminary in Vermont in 1935. She then enrolled at Simmons College in Boston, Massachusetts where she earned a bachelor’s degree in 1939.

After her graduation, Hinton worked in her father’s laboratory and as an assistant to John Howard Mueller in Harvard University’s Department of Bacteriology and Immunology. There, she helped develop the Mueller-Hinton agar, a culture medium in which bacteria can thrive. It has become one of the standard methods used to test bacterial resistance to antibiotics.

From 1942 to 1945, Hinton worked as a medical technician in Arizona for the U.S. War Department. After World War II ended Hinton decided she wanted to be a veterinarian and enrolled in the School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. She was class historian and class secretary, graduating with her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (VMD) in 1949. That year, Alfreda Johnson Webb also gained her VMD, from Tuskegee University. They were the first two African-American women veterinarians in the nation.

After qualifying, Hinton worked as a small animal veterinarian back in Canton, Massachusetts until 1955. That year she joined the Department of Agriculture as a federal government inspector in Framingham, Massachusetts involved in research and response to outbreaks of disease in livestock. She retired about five years later in 1960 at the relatively early age of 41 and spent the rest of her life, caring for a garden and a variety of pets at her home. Jane Hinton never married. She died on April 9, 2003, a few weeks before her 84th birthday.

Author Profile

Hilda Bastian is a scientist, blogger, and cartoonist, and an active Wikipedian. She was a consumer advocate in Australia and internationally in the 1980s and 1990s, and a citizen scientist in epidemiology before moving into systematic reviewing and meta-research. She was one of the founders of the Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that systematically reviews evidence on the effects of health care, and established its Consumer Network. She has been a senior scientist at the national Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) in Germany and at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the United States, and blogged at PLOS (Public Library of Science), Scientific American, and the James Lind Library.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Bastian, H. (2020, April 23). Jane Hinton (1919-2003). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/jane-hinton-1919-2003/

Source of the Author's Information:

Lisa M. Greenhill, et al., Navigating Diversity and Inclusion in Veterinary Medicine (West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press, 2013), Jill Ann Grimes et al., Sexually Transmitted Disease: Encyclopedia of Diseases, Prevention, Treatment, and Issues (Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2013); Charles H. Jones, Obituary: Jane Hinton VMD (Unpublished, Archives, University of Pennsylvania, 2003); James H. Kessler, Distinguished African American scientists of the 20th century (Phoenix, Arizona: Oryx Press, 1996); Howard J. Mueller and Jane Hinton, “A protein-free medium for primary isolation of the Gonococcus and Meningococcus,” Experimental Biology and Medicine, 48:1 (October, 1941) pages 330-333 (October, 1941); Senior Class, School of Veterinary Medicine, The 1949 Scalpel (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1949), and Jessie Carney Smith, Handy African American history answer book (Canton, Michigan: Visible Ink Press, 2014).

Further Reading