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June 3 - BlackFacts.com Black History Minute

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Manage episode 330538922 series 2885711
Content provided by BlackFacts.com, Nicole Franklin, and Bryant Monteilh. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by BlackFacts.com, Nicole Franklin, and Bryant Monteilh or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

BlackFacts.com presents the black fact of the day for June 3.

Physician Charles Drew was born.

He was an African American physician and surgeon who was an authority on the preservation of human blood for transfusion.

Drew was educated at Amherst College, McGill University, Montreal, and Columbia University.

While earning his doctorate at Columbia in the late 1930s, he researched the properties and preservation of blood plasma.

He soon developed efficient ways to process and store large quantities of blood plasma in “blood banks.”

As the leading authority in the field, he organized and directed the blood-plasma programs of the United States and Great Britain in the early years of World War II, while also agitating the authorities to stop excluding the blood of African Americans from plasma-supply networks.

He resigned his official posts in 1942 after the armed forces ruled that the blood of African Americans would be accepted but would have to be stored separately from that of whites.

He then became a surgeon and professor of medicine at Freedmen’s Hospital, Washington, D.C., and Howard University (1942–50).

Learn black history, teach black history at blackfacts.com

  continue reading

152 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 330538922 series 2885711
Content provided by BlackFacts.com, Nicole Franklin, and Bryant Monteilh. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by BlackFacts.com, Nicole Franklin, and Bryant Monteilh or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

BlackFacts.com presents the black fact of the day for June 3.

Physician Charles Drew was born.

He was an African American physician and surgeon who was an authority on the preservation of human blood for transfusion.

Drew was educated at Amherst College, McGill University, Montreal, and Columbia University.

While earning his doctorate at Columbia in the late 1930s, he researched the properties and preservation of blood plasma.

He soon developed efficient ways to process and store large quantities of blood plasma in “blood banks.”

As the leading authority in the field, he organized and directed the blood-plasma programs of the United States and Great Britain in the early years of World War II, while also agitating the authorities to stop excluding the blood of African Americans from plasma-supply networks.

He resigned his official posts in 1942 after the armed forces ruled that the blood of African Americans would be accepted but would have to be stored separately from that of whites.

He then became a surgeon and professor of medicine at Freedmen’s Hospital, Washington, D.C., and Howard University (1942–50).

Learn black history, teach black history at blackfacts.com

  continue reading

152 episodes

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