Gordon Daniel Morgan (October 31, 1931 – December 17, 2019) was an American sociologist who became the first Black professor at the University of Arkansas in 1969.[1][2]
Gordon Morgan was born in 1931 in Mayflower, Arkansas to Roosevelt Morgan and Georgia Madlock Morgan. He went to college at the Arkansas Agricultural, Mechanical & Normal College (the largest and oldest historically black college in the state, which later (re)joined the University of Arkansas system as University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff),[3] where he graduated in sociology in 1953.[4] Morgan served in the US Army from 1953 in the Korean War, and became first lieutenant in the artillery.[1]
He continued graduate studies as one of the first Black students at the University of Arkansas (MA in sociology, 1956),[5] and then continued at the University of Minnesota and Washington State University (PhD, 1961).[6][1][7][5]
He married in 1957 with Izola Preston, and they had 4 children.[1]
After working as researcher in Kampala, Uganda and teaching at his alma mater Arkansas AM&N and Lincoln University (Missouri), Morgan was hired as the first Black assistant professor at the University of Arkansas in 1969.[4][8] He did research on a range of topics, including the intersection between race and education, the Caribbean, the use of the dollar standard in African countries and sociology in general.[7][9]
Morgan co-founded the university's Black Student Association in the wake of Martin Luther King Jr.[10][11] in 1969 and mentored thousands of students.[7]
Morgan published multiple books, including America without Ethnicity (1981) and more for public consumption The Edge of Campus: A Journal of the Black Experience at the University of Arkansas (1990, together with his wife).
Morgan retired in 2012.
Morgan was appointed as 'University Professor', a distinguished status reserved for professors with national or international recognition that have extensive tenure.[7] The university named one of the student residence halls after him: Gordon Morgan Hall.
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