Percy Lavon Julian (1899-1975) was an African American chemist whose pioneering synthesis of plant-derived steroids made cortisone and other hormone-based medicines widely available for the first time. He was born in Montgomery, Alabama, the grandson of former slaves. Alabama's public schools did not offer education beyond the eighth grade to Black children at the time, but his parents — a railway mail clerk and a teacher — insisted on his further education. He entered DePauw University in Indiana as what the institution called a sub-freshman, taking high school classes alongside his college studies, and graduated as valedictorian in 1920. American graduate programmes in chemistry were largely closed to Black students; he was refused admission at several top universities and taught for several years at historically Black colleges before winning a fellowship for graduate work at Harvard. Harvard gave him a master's degree but denied him the chance to teach or to complete a doctorate because of his race. He eventually earned his doctorate in Vienna in 1931, one of the few options then available. In 1935 he completed the total synthesis of the alkaloid physostigmine, used to treat glaucoma, beating a competing English group. Unable to get university chemistry positions because of his race, he joined the Glidden Company, a paint manufacturer, where he led research that developed industrial methods for producing steroids from soybean oil — processes that made cortisone affordable to patients with rheumatoid arthritis and opened the way to a generation of hormone-based medicines. He later founded his own company. He and his family faced racist violence in the Chicago suburb where they bought a house in 1950, including attempts to burn and bomb their home. He died in 1975. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1973, the second African American so honoured.
Percy Julian matters for three linked reasons. First, his chemistry is of the first rank. His 1935 synthesis of physostigmine, a naturally occurring alkaloid used in the treatment of glaucoma, was an achievement of great technical difficulty and priority. His subsequent development of industrial methods for synthesising steroids from plant sources — using soybeans as the starting material — made possible the mass production of progesterone, testosterone, and cortisone. Before Julian's work, cortisone cost several hundred dollars a gram, far beyond most patients' reach. After his work, the price fell dramatically and the drug became available to people suffering from rheumatoid arthritis and a wide range of other inflammatory conditions. Second, his career is a specific test case for what segregation cost American science. He was refused teaching positions and research posts at major universities because he was Black. He was denied the chance to complete a doctorate at Harvard for the same reason. The industrial chemistry career he pursued was a second-best path that he came to excel in, but the first-best path — a university chair at which he could have trained generations of students — was closed. The loss is not only personal. It is also a loss to American science of the students he would have trained and the research directions he would have explored. Third, his example of perseverance under specific and substantial hostility has been important to generations of later African American scientists, who have known they had a predecessor who did first-rank work under conditions more hostile than their own.
The PBS NOVA documentary Forgotten Genius (2007) is an accessible starting point and is available online.
The entry on Julian in the Science History Institute's online encyclopedia is reliable and includes photographs and references. The DePauw University archives maintain material on Julian as their most distinguished alumnus.
James Anderson Shreeve's Nature's Medicine (2001) and Bernhard Witkop's biographical memoir for the National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoirs series provide more detailed scientific treatments. For the wider context of Black chemists in twentieth-century America: Wini Warren's Black Women Scientists in the United States (1999) and Kenneth Manning's Black Apollo of Science (1983) on Ernest Everett Just provide companion studies.
Percy Julian invented cortisone.
Julian did not invent cortisone, and cortisone was not originally discovered through his work. Cortisone was isolated from the adrenal glands of cattle in the 1930s and 1940s by several research groups, and its structure was determined by Edward Kendall, Tadeusz Reichstein, and Philip Hench, who shared the 1950 Nobel Prize for this work. Julian's contribution was the development of synthetic methods that made cortisone and related steroids producible in large quantities from plant sources. This was a different achievement, and a substantial one — without Julian's work, cortisone would have remained a rare and expensive drug — but it was not the original discovery. Accuracy about what he did matters for understanding his specific place in the history of the drug.
Percy Julian won the Nobel Prize.
Julian did not receive the Nobel Prize. He was nominated but did not win. He received many other honours over his career — nineteen honorary doctorates, election to the National Academy of Sciences in 1973, the induction into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, and others — but the Nobel eluded him. The failure to win the Nobel does not diminish his scientific importance, but it is sometimes misremembered. The pattern of not winning the Nobel has been noted for other important chemists whose work was of comparable significance, including Dmitri Mendeleev.
Percy Julian's difficulties were primarily personal hardships he overcame through talent.
Framing Julian's career as a story of individual perseverance against personal adversity misses the structural nature of what he faced. He was not dealing with bad luck or personal enemies. He was working within a system of legal and social segregation that systematically excluded Black Americans from higher education, professional positions, and safe neighbourhoods. The fact that he succeeded despite this system does not prove that the system was surmountable for most who faced it; it proves that exceptional individuals could sometimes make it through despite costs that stopped many others. The difference matters for how we draw lessons from his example today.
Julian's work was mainly important as a symbol for African Americans.
Julian's symbolic importance for African American scientists is real and deserved, but it is a consequence of his scientific importance, not a substitute for it. His synthesis of physostigmine was technically outstanding. His industrial methods for steroid production made possible the mass availability of medicines that had previously been out of reach. His laboratory produced first-rank chemistry. Treating him as primarily a symbolic figure, without engaging with the specific content of his chemistry, does him a disservice and repeats a pattern of recognising Black scientists for their identity rather than for their work. Both dimensions of his importance deserve serious attention.
For scholarly depth: the Chemical Heritage Foundation (now Science History Institute) holds the most important collection of Julian materials in the United States. Specialist journals including Bulletin for the History of Chemistry have published technical studies of his syntheses. For the broader history of Glidden's soybean research programme: company archives and industrial chemistry histories provide substantial context. Recent scholarship in African American history of science has continued to reassess his career and legacy.
Your feedback helps other teachers and helps us improve TeachAnyClass.