Celebrating Black History Month at the ELTC

Howdy all! 

Happy Black History Month! In honor of this month, we have listed different resources below that celebrate and highlight the work of Black engineers and innovators!

Need research assistance, but don’t know who to reach out to? Feel free to reach out to Noël Kopriva (Head Engineering Librarian) and/or Dylan Martin (Black Studies Subject Librarian)

 

Books about Black Engineers and Innovators

Created equal : the lives and ideas of Black American innovators / James Michael Brodie.

Brodie tells stories of over 60 African-American inventors and innovators whose accomplishments have often been overlooked or obscured by mainstream historians–from a slave known only as Ned who invented a cotton harvester to black scientists working for NASA today.

Available online for free via the Internet Archive (requires creating a account)

 

Black Stars: African American Women Scientists and Inventors: Sullivan, Otha Richard, Haskins, Jim: 9781118466391: Amazon.com: Books

 

African American women scientists and inventors / Otha Richard Sullivan ; Jim Haskins, general editor.

Sullivan once headed Detroit’s program to infuse African American history into the public school curriculum. Here he profiles 25 black American woman who have made significant contributions to science and technology, explaining that many, many more are utterly unknown because first of legal bans on granting patents to slaves and later because of social constraints on women. His message to black school girls is that just because they have not heard of black women scientists does not mean that the profession is closed to them. 

 

Overnight Code: The Life of Raye Montague, the Woman Who Revolutionized Naval Engineering: Bowers, Paige, Montague, David: 9781641602594: Amazon.com: Books

Overnight code : the life of Raye Montague, the woman who revolutionized naval engineering / Paige Bowers & David R. Montague.

Equal parts coming-of-age tale, civil rights history, and reflection on the power of education, Overnight Code is a tale about the persistence and perseverance required to forge the life of your dreams when the odds against you seem insurmountable, and shows how one woman refused to let other people’s prejudices stand in the way of her success.

 

 

African American Women Chemists: 9780199742882: Brown, Jeannette: Books - Amazon.com

 

African American Women Chemists / Jeanette Brown

In this book, Jeannette Brown, an African American woman chemist herself, will present a wide-ranging historical introduction to the relatively new presence of African American women in the field of chemistry. It will detail their struggles to obtain an education and their efforts to succeed in a field in which there were few African American men, much less African American women.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amazon.com: Changing the Face of Engineering: The African American Experience eBook : Slaughter, John Brooks, Tao, Yu, Pearson, Jr., eds, Willie, Slaughter, John Brooks, Tao, Yu, Pearson Jr., Willie: Books

Changing the face of engineering : the African American experience / edited by John Brooks Slaughter, Yu Tao, and Willie Pearson, Jr.

In Changing the Face of Engineering, twenty-four eminent scholars address the underrepresentation of African Americans in engineering from a wide variety of disciplinary and professional perspectives while proposing workable classroom solutions and public policy initiatives. They combine robust statistical analyses with personal narratives of African American engineers and STEM instructors who, by taking evidenced-based approaches, have found success in graduating African American engineers. 

 

 

Black Inventors in the Age of Segregation: Granville T. Woods, Lewis H. Latimer, and Shelby J. Davidson (Johns Hopkins Studies in the History of Technology): Fouché, Rayvon: 9780801882708: Amazon.com: Books

 

Black inventors in the age of segregation : Granville T. Woods, Lewis H. Latimer, & Shelby J. Davidson / Rayvon Fouché.

In this study, Rayvon Fouche examines the life and work of three African Americans: Granville Woods (1856-1910), an independent inventor; Lewis Latimer (1848-1928), a corporate engineer with General Electric; and Shelby Davidson (1868-1930), who worked in the U.S. Treasury Department. Detailing the difficulties and human frailties that make their achievements all the more impressive, Fouche explains how each man used invention for financial gain, as a claim on entering adversarial environments, and as a means to technical stature in a Jim Crow institutional setting.

 

 

Podcasts about Black Engineers and Innovators

BGDE Podcast

 

Black Girls Do Engineer Podcast

This podcast takes you inside the world of STEM like never before. Every episode is a journey — a day in the life of engineers, innovators, creators, and world-shapers from across the globe. Hear their real stories, their paths, their challenges, and their visions for the future of AI, robotics, aviation, biotech, clean energy, cybersecurity, software, finance tech, gaming, and more.

 

 

TANGOTI - There Are No Girls On The Internet

There Are No Girls On The Internet with Bridget Todd

The Internet didn’t just happen—it’s built every day by the people who use it. In this timely and inspiring podcast, Bridget leads with curiosity and compassion, inviting trailblazing women, Black innovators, queer creators, and other visionaries to share how they’re shaping the digital world for the better. Through insightful, compassionate conversations, There Are No Girls On The Internet explores the Internet’s missteps, its moments of magic, and the people boldly reimagining it. Equal parts thought-provoking and inspiring, this is the podcast for anyone who believes the Internet should be a place of connection, freedom, and possibility.

Reading Revelry (Spring 2026)

Howdy everyone!

Happy 2026! We hope everyone has had a wonderful Winter break! You can request any of the titles below by clicking on their hyperlinked titles. If you have any issues requesting, or if you have any book recommendations for future Reading Revelries, please contact Amanda May at asmay@missouri.edu

Our picks for the Spring: 

When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice: Williams, Terry Tempest: 9781250024114: Amazon.com: Books

 

When Women Were Birds: 54 Variations on Voice by Terry Tempest Williams (links to DBRL catalog)

“I am leaving you all my journals, but you must promise me you won’t look at them until after I’m gone.” This is what Terry Tempest Williams’s mother, the matriarch of a large Mormon clan in northern Utah, told her a week before she died. It was a shock to Williams to discover that her mother had kept journals. But not as much of a shock as it was to discover that the three shelves of journals were all blank. In fifty-four short chapters, Williams recounts memories of her mother, ponders her own faith, and contemplates the notion of absence and presence art and in our world.

 

Amazon.com: In Real Life: 9781596436589: Doctorow, Cory, Wang, Jen: Books

In Real Life by Cory Doctorow and Jen Wang (links to DBRL catalog)

Anda loves Coarsegold Online, the massively-multiplayer role playing game that she spends most of her free time on. It’s a place where she can be a leader, a fighter, a hero. It’s a place where she can meet people from all over the world, and make friends. Gaming is, for Anda, entirely a good thing.
But things become a lot more complicated when Anda befriends a gold farmer — a poor Chinese kid whose avatar in the game illegally collects valuable objects and then sells them to players from developed countries with money to burn. This behavior is strictly against the rules in Coarsegold, but Anda soon comes to realize that questions of right and wrong are a lot less straightforward when a real person’s real livelihood is at stake.
From acclaimed teen author Cory Doctorow and rising star cartoonist Jen Wang, In Real Life is a sensitive, thoughtful look at adolescence, gaming, poverty, and culture-clash.

 

Amazon.com: Vanishing Fleece: Adventures in American Wool: 9781419735318: Parkes, Clara: Books

 

Vanishing Fleece: Adventures in American Wool by Clara Parkes (links to UM System E-book copy)

Clara Parkes, a renowned knitter, shares her year-long adventure through America’s colorful, fascinating—and slowly disappearing—wool industry. She ventures across the country to meet the shepherds, dyers, and countless workers without whom our knitting needles would be empty, our mills idle, and our feet woefully cold. Along the way, she encounters a flock of Saxon Merino sheep in upstate New York, tours a scouring plant in Texas, visits a steamy Maine dyehouse, helps sort freshly shorn wool on a working farm, and learns how wool fleece is measured, baled, shipped, and turned into skeins. In pursuit of the perfect yarn, Parkes describes a brush with the dangers of opening a bale (they can explode), and her adventures from Maine to Wisconsin (‘the most knitterly state’) and back again. By the end of the book, you’ll be ready to set aside the backyard chickens and add a flock of sheep instead.

 

Make It Scream, Make It Burn: Essays: Jamison, Leslie: 9780316259637: Amazon.com: Books

Make It Scream, Make It Burn by Leslie Jamison (links to DBRL catalog)

With the virtuosic synthesis of memoir, criticism, and journalism for which Leslie Jamison has been so widely acclaimed, the fourteen essays in Make It Scream, Make It Burn explore the oceanic depths of longing and the reverberations of obsession. Among Jamison’s subjects are 52 Blue, deemed “the loneliest whale in the world”; the eerie past-life memories of children; the devoted citizens of an online world called Second Life; the haunted landscape of the Sri Lankan Civil War; and an entire museum dedicated to the relics of broken relationships. Jamison follows these examinations to more personal reckonings — with elusive men and ruptured romances, with marriage and maternity — in essays about eloping in Las Vegas, becoming a stepmother, and giving birth.

home Engineering Library, Events and Exhibits, Gateway Carousel ELTC New Exhibit: Oki Data Microline 320 Turbo: Calculated Inheritance

New Exhibit: Oki Data Microline 320 Turbo: Calculated Inheritance

What is impact dot matrix printing? Which technologies converged in the mid-20th century to create such a computing icon?

Located in the Engineering Library and Technology Commons and created by Library Technology Services, the history and anatomy of the Okidata Microline 320 Turbo is explored in this compelling exhibit.

For those interested in learning more about the exhibit, there is an online library guide available at https://libraryguides.missouri.edu/dotmatrix