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Alfred O. Coffin (1861-?)

January 18, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Robert Fikes

Alfred O. Coffin

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Although he was the first African American to earn a Ph.D. in a field of the biological sciences, Alfred Oscar Coffin ended his career as Professor of Romance Languages at Langston University in Oklahoma. Born in Pontotoc, Mississippi on May 14, 1861, Coffin earned his bachelor’s degree at Fisk University and his master’s and Ph.D. in biology at Illinois Wesleyan University in 1889. Beginning in 1887, Coffin taught for two years at Alcorn Agricultural & Mechanical College in Mississippi. From 1889 to 1895 he was Professor of Mathematics and Romance Language at Wiley University in Marshall, Texas where he found time to write a treatise on the native plants there. Back at Alcorn A&M from 1895 to 1898 he worked as the campus disbursement agent.  From 1898 to 1909 Coffin was a public school principal in San Antonio, Texas and in Kansas City, Missouri.  Starting in 1910 for several years he worked as an advance agent for Blind Boone Concert Company, promoting the blind ragtime musician.

Coffin’s most significant scholarly accomplishment were The Origin of the Mound Builders (Cincinnati, Ohio: Elm Street Publishing Co., 1889) which tracked the ancient Indian mound builders of the Mississippi Valley to their origin in southeastern Mexico. The second was his book Land Without Chimneys, Or The Byways of Mexico (Cincinnati: The Editor Publishing Company, 1896). Having traveled extensively in Mexico—particularly Monterey, Mexico City, and Guadalajara—the book is part travelogue, part history of the people of Mexico and, oddly enough, part speculation on a connection between the ancient peoples of the region and the fabled civilization of Atlantis. Coffin’s book marked the first time a black American had published a significant book concerning Latin Americans. The date of Coffin’s death is unknown.

About the Author

Author Profile

Robert Fikes, Jr., a 1970 graduate of Tuskegee University, earned graduate degrees in modern European history and library science at the University of Minnesota. Retired since 2017, he worked as a reference librarian at San Diego State University where he was also a subject bibliographer for Africana Studies, European, American, Middle Eastern, and African history. Fikes has published numerous journal articles, essays, encyclopedia entries, newspaper and magazine contributions, bibliographies, and several print and online books pertaining to history, art, and literature.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Fikes, R. (2007, January 18). Alfred O. Coffin (1861-?). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/coffin-alfred-o-1861/

Source of the Author's Information:

Who’s Who of the Colored Race (Chicago: F. L. Mather, 1915); Harry H. Greene, Holders of Doctorates Among American Negroes (Boston: Meador Pub. Co., 1946); http://webfiles.uci.edu/mcbrown/display/coffin.html.

Further Reading

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