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Ernest Everett Just
Science & Technology

Ernest Everett Just

Born August 14, 1883 · Charleston, South Carolina · Joined the Ancestors October 27, 1941
A pioneering cell biologist whose groundbreaking research on egg fertilization was so far ahead of its time that the white scientific establishment refused to take it seriously — Ernest Just was one of America's most brilliant and tragic scientific minds.
Known For
Pioneer in cell biology
Barrier
Racism blocked lab access in America
Legacy
Worked at Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole

Ernest Everett Just was born in Charleston, South Carolina. After graduating magna cum laude from Dartmouth College — the sole honors graduate of his class — he joined the faculty at Howard University and began summer research at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

Just's research on the cell surface and egg fertilization was revolutionary. He published over 70 scientific papers and two major books, making discoveries about cell membrane function that wouldn't be fully appreciated for decades. He was the first recipient of the NAACP's Spingarn Medal in science.

But American racism meant that despite his brilliance, Just could never obtain a position at a major research university. He was confined to Howard, which lacked adequate laboratory facilities, and could only conduct serious research during summer months at Woods Hole. Frustrated, he moved to Europe in the 1930s to work freely. He died of pancreatic cancer at 58, his genius never fully recognized in his own country.

"We feel the beauty of nature because we are part of nature and because we know that however much in our separate domains we abstract from the unity of Nature, this unity remains."
— Ernest Everett Just
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Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1883
Born in Charleston, South Carolina
1907
Graduates magna cum laude from Dartmouth
1909
Joins faculty at Howard University
1915
Awarded first Spingarn Medal for science
1916
Earns Ph.D. from the University of Chicago
1929
Publishes landmark research on cell fertilization
1941
Dies of pancreatic cancer in Washington, D.C.

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