Among the most influential African American leaders of the late nineteenth century, W. E. B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington both espoused the value of business education. Washington served as principal of Tuskegee University, which provided vocational training in agriculture and industry, from its founding in 1881.2 Du Bois believed a liberal arts education played a critical role in the economic advancement of African Americans. "For the Negro then to go into business means a great deal," Du Bois wrote. "It is, indeed, a step in social progress worth measuring."3 Harvard Business School (HBS), the country's first graduate program in business administration, opened its doors in 1908. Many of the first African American students came from historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) as well as Harvard College. They were among the earliest students in the country to earn an MBA. The first known African American graduate of HBS was Wendell Thomas Cunningham (MBA '15).


Wendell Thomas Cunningham
HBS MBA 1915
Atlanta, GA
Clark University, 1913
Wendell T. Cunningham completed his MBA with his thesis "Plan for a Reorganization of a Fraternal Insurance Company." He then assumed a leadership role in Cunningham & Sons, the real estate firm in Atlanta founded by his father Samuel. A decorated WWI and WWII veteran, Cunningham also served on the boards of Clark University (today Clark Atlanta University, a historically black college and university [HBCU]) and Warren Memorial United Methodist Church in Atlanta.


Samuel Stewart McCulloch
HBS 1917–1918
Clarksville, TX
Harvard College, 1917
An alumnus of Andover Academy and Harvard College, Samuel McCulloch spent a year studying at HBS upon completion of his undergraduate degree. His career trajectory took him from Muskogee, Oklahoma, to New York City and finally to Chicago, where he worked for the Cook County Department of Weights and Measures.


Travis Herndon Brown Jr.
HBS 1919–1920
Culpeper, VA
Randolph-Macon College, 1914
Travis Herndon Brown entered HBS following his military service in France during WWI. He left the School to take a position with the American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) in New York City. At the time of his death, Brown was a statistician in the Treasurer's Department.


Norris Bumstead Herndon
HBS MBA 1921
Atlanta, GA Atlanta University, 1919
After earning his MBA, Norris B. Herndon returned to Atlanta to oversee the growth of the Atlanta Life Insurance Company (today the Atlanta Life Financial Group), founded by his father Alonzo. Atlanta Life became one of the most significant Black-owned businesses in the United States. Herndon continued his family's tradition of philanthropy with major financial contributions to the United Negro College Fund, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and the NAACP.


Benjamin Tanner Johnson
HBS MBA 1921
Princeton, NJ
Howard University, 1919
Benjamin Tanner Johnson was a tireless champion for African American-owned banks and helped found the New England People's Finance Company (an African American bank and lender). He also worked as a Connecticut state supervisor in the Works Progress Administration (WPA), taught finance at Howard University, and was executive secretary in the Urban League of Canton, Ohio.


William Clarence Matney
HBS 1921–1923
Richland, VA
Ohio University, 1920
A leading figure in the cooperative movement, after leaving HBS, W. C. Matney became director of the Bluefield Institute (today the today the historically black college Bluefield State) Department of Business Administration. He was a founder of the Negro Cooperative Guild, an organization initiated by W. E. B. Du Bois in 1918 to provide economic studies and assist the formation of cooperatives. Matney regularly corresponded with Du Bois and in 1930 wrote the significant article "Exploitation or Co-operation" for The Crisis (the official magazine of the NAACP).


Walter Harold Smith
HBS MBA 1923
Chattanooga, TN
Atlanta University, 1919
A classmate and friend of Norris B. Herndon, Walter H. Smith also embarked upon a lifelong career at Atlanta Life Insurance Company upon completion of his MBA. Starting as a field agent and inspector in Birmingham, Alabama, Smith later became the company's senior investment officer and was elected to its board of directors in 1936.


Edwin Bush Jourdain Jr.
HBS 1921–1924
New Bedford, MA
Harvard College, 1921
The son of a member of the Niagara Movement, a civil rights organization founded in 1905 that prefigured the NAACP, Edwin B. Jourdain was a journalist, activist, and politician. Jourdain left HBS for Evanston, Illinois, where he became its first African American alderman. Also appointed the first African American assistant state superintendent of public instruction in Illinois, Jourdain fought for integration in schools and public facilities.


Frederick William Martin
HBS MBA 1924
Yazoo City, MS
Talladega College, 1921
Fred W. Martin earned his MBA in 1924 and entered the fields of politics and journalism. Martin founded Jersey City's first Black newspaper, the New Jersey Herald News, with his brother Richard. He later became the city's first African American councilman. Martin's political career focused on desegregation in public housing and schools and increased educational opportunities for minorities.


Alfred Montgomery Pelham
HBS MBA 1933
Ontario, Canada
University of Michigan, 1922
Al Pelham returned to Michigan after receiving his MBA. He held numerous positions in the Detroit and Wayne County governments, including accountant, auditor, tax commissioner, and Detroit's first African American controller. He also held faculty and administrative positions at Wayne State University, notably associate professor of political science and assistant vice president of finance.


Monroe Davis Dowling
HBS MBA 1931
Atlantic City, NJ
Lincoln University, 1929
Upon graduation from HBS, Monroe Davis Dowling worked for the Colored Merchants' Association (CMA), a cooperative of stores that specifically supported the needs of Black grocers. A close friend of Justice Thurgood Marshall, Dowling served in managerial roles for the U.S. Department of Internal Revenue, the American Cancer Society, and the New Jersey Urban League.


Howard Naylor Fitzhugh
HBS MBA 1933
Washington, DC
Harvard College, 1930
After earning his MBA, H. Naylor Fitzhugh became a professor of accounting at Howard University, where he developed a marketing program, was known for incorporating field research in his teaching, and mentored many Howard students. Joining the Pepsi-Cola Company in 1965, he made pioneering contributions to the field of target marketing as vice president for special markets.