Carolyn Bradshaw Morgan is an American statistician and applied mathematician, one of the first African-American undergraduates at Vanderbilt University, and the former chair of the mathematics department at Hampton University.
Education and career
Morgan was born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina,[1] the oldest of three children of a single mother. She grew up going to segregated schools, but with integrated Advanced Placement classes and summer programs; she was her high school valedictorian. She became a student at Vanderbilt University, supported by a Rockefeller Scholarship.[2] She majored in mathematics,[1] and graduated in 1969 with her future husband, chemical engineer Morris Morgan.[3] Both were among the eight African-American undergraduate students first admitted when Vanderbilt desegregated in the mid-1960s.[2][3][4]
^Flowers, Lamont A.; Flowers, Lawrence O.; Moore, James L. III, eds. (2016), "About the Authors", Advancing Educational Outcomes in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Issues in Black Education, University Press of America, p. 139, ISBN9780761867890