Happy hump day POU Family! We are highlighting the work of various African-American archaeologists and anthropologists.
William Montague Cobb (1904 – 1990) was a pioneering 20th-century physical anthropologist. As the first African American to earn a Ph.D. in anthropology, and the only one until after the Korean War, his main focus in the anthropological discipline was studying the concept of race and the negative impact it has on communities of color. Cobb prolifically wrote both popular and scholarly articles during the course of his career and trained an untold number of students.
Cobb was born on October 12, 1904, in Washington DC. His mother, Alexizne Montague Cobb grew up in Massachusetts and is part of Native American descent. His father, William Elmer Cobb grew up in Selma, Alabama. They met in Washington DC when W. Montague’s father started his own printing business for the Black community. He married Hilda B. Smith, Ruth Smith Lloyd’s sister.
The tipping point for Cobb’s initial interest in Anthropology came from a book of the animal kingdom that his grandfather owned. In this book, there were illustrations of human beings separated by race, but were illustrated with what Cobb called “equal dignity.” This instigated a pondering on the concept of race, as the same type of “equal dignity” was not granted in the society that surrounded Cobb’s life.
Cobb graduated from Dunbar High School, which was considered to be of the best of African American high schools and continued to earn his Bachelor of Arts from Amherst College in 1925. He continued his research in embryology at Woods Hole Marine Biology Laboratory, where he earned the Blodgett Scholarship for proficiency in Biology. He would later earn his MD (Doctor of Medicine) from the Howard University Medical School in 1929. Numa PG Adams, who was the Dean of Howard University at the time, was assigned the task of organizing a new faculty of African American physicians to help advance the school in the medical field. Cobb, in turn, had the aspirations of creating a laboratory of anatomy and physical anthropology at Howard University that would have the resources for African American scholars to contribute instead of just defending debates in racial biology. He would then spend a few years at Case Western Reserve University, studying under T. Wingate Todd, where he would contribute to the Hamann-Todd Skeletal Collection, and eventually earn his Ph. D in Anthropology.
Cobb distinguished himself by representing the pursuit of social responsibility in the field of anthropology, as well as by being a scholarly activist. In his studies and publications, he pursued disproving and dissolving misinformation including racially and socially biased studies in the fields of anatomy and anthropology. He believed that scholars of the academy must take responsibility “not only for their own thoughts and actions but also for their own society” because he believed that the values that are expressed, whether subtly or overtly, through studies, are key in the shaping of culture and society. He aspired to be the first anthropologist to undertake a demographic analysis that would expose the toll racism was taking on the African American population, and he wanted to create the resources so he would not be the last. His work illustrated the consequences of the human condition as a result of segregation and racism on both sides of the spectrum and used his work to confront these issues. He also was the President of the NAACP from 1976 to 1982. He died on November 20, 1990.
Cobb was long involved in the African identified descendants’ struggle for freedom, justice, and equality. He was a member of the board of directors for the NAACP since 1949 and, for a longer period, active in the affairs of the Associate’s District of Columbia Branch. He also was active in the National Urban League and the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. He also was editor of the journal of the National Medical Association.
He created the Imhotep Conferences on Hospital Integration in 1957, an annual conference seeking to end hospital and medical school segregation and continued until 1964.