National Society of Black Engineers (1975- )

December 31, 2008 
/ Contributed By: Kayomi Wada

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National Society of Black Engineers Logo|National Society of Black Engineers at Founders Monument

Fair use image|Image courtesy Minority Engineering Program

Established in 1975 at a national conference held at Purdue University, the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) was created to increase the number of African American engineers. Their mission is to train black engineers who “excel academically, succeed professionally and positively impact the community.” The NSBE has more than 30,000 members spread across 233 college chapters, 65 alumni extension chapters, and 89 pre-college chapters.

In 1974, six members of Purdue University’s Black Society of Engineers, Anthony Harris, Brian Harris, Stanley L. Kirtley, John W. Logan, Jr., Edward A. Coleman, and George A. Smith, sent letters to every accredited engineering program in the United States asking for black student leaders who would be interested in a national organization. After finding interest, the six leaders scheduled a conference to be held April 10-12, 1975. At this time, the Black Society of Engineers’ president, Brian Harris, changed the organization’s name to the Society of Black Engineers. Forty-eight students representing 32 colleges attended the first conference.  An affirmative vote was cast to create a national society. In 1976, the NSBE was officially incorporated as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.

NSBE has a national communications network (NSBENET), two national magazines (NSBE Magazine and NSBE Bridge), an internal newsletter, and a professional newsletter (The Career Engineer).  The organization also offers scholarships. NSBE also publishes resume books and has the National Leadership Institute, a year round development and training initiative to improve the leadership skills of its members. In addition, NSBE hosts an annual national convention, inviting students and professionals from across the country.

“A Walk for Education,” started in 2006, is an annual event where teams of NSBE members go door-to-door in neighborhoods, pass out literature at local businesses, and inform local youth about career opportunities in science, technology, engineering and math, emphasizing the importance of finishing high school and going to college. The outreach to the community continues after the event, as NSBE members enlist interested people in NSBE’s Technical OutReach Community Help (TORCH), a year-round mentoring and tutoring program.

Author Profile

Kayomi Wada is a M.A. student at the University of Washington Tacoma. She earned a B.A. from the University of Washington in Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences concentrating in Arts, Media, and Culture. She is currently researching Japanese American and African American communities in the Pacific Northwest.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Wada, K. (2008, December 31). National Society of Black Engineers (1975- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/national-society-black-engineers/

Source of the Author's Information:

NSBE Mission Statement and Objectives: http://national.nsbe.org/AboutUs/TheMission/tabid/67/Default.aspx; In-Sung Yoo, “Percentage of Black Students Graduating in Engineering is Rising,” USA Today, April 20, 2004; Robert L. Jamieson Jr., “Seattle is Losing a Voice of Righteous Passion in Carl Mack,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer, January 24, 2005.

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