Edward Bouchet (1852–1918) was an American
physicist and educator. He was the first
African American to earn a PhD from an American university, completing his
dissertation in physics at
Yale University in 1876. Bouchet had become one of the first African Americans to graduate from Yale College in 1874. On the basis of his academic record, he was elected to
Phi Beta Kappa, an academic
honor society. Unable to find a university-teaching or research-facility position due to
racial discrimination, he moved to
Philadelphia in 1876 and took a position at the
Institute for Colored Youth, where he taught physics and chemistry for the next 26 years. This photograph of Bouchet, from the archives of Yale, is part of a portrait album of students in the class of 1874.
Photograph credit: George Kendall Warren; restored by Adam Cuerden