Ida Gray Nelson/Rollins: First African-American and 23rd Woman to Graduate from Dental School

Posted on 12. Mar, 2010 by Leshell Hatley in Dentistry, Scholarly Celebrations

Ida Gray (later known as Ida Gray Nelson) was born in Clarksville, Tennessee. Her mother, Jennie Gray, died in her early teens when Gray was just an infant. Her father was a white man whose name is not known and he apparently did not play a significant part in Gray’s upbringing. After her mother died Gray was raised by a relative, Caroline Gray, who was a 35-year-old mother of three. Around 1868 Caroline Gray moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, with her three children and Ida Gray. Gray came from humble beginnings but a part-time job as an assistant in a dental office as a teenager served as a springboard for her 40-year career as a dentist.

Education

Overall

She attended Gaines Public High School, a segregated public school in Cincinnati, graduating in 1887 (when she was 20 years old). She entered the University of Michigan Dental School and received her DDS degree in 1890. At this time Gray became the first Black woman in America to earn a Doctor of Dental Surgery Degree. She returned to Cincinnati where she established a very successful private practice.

How It All Started

The dental office in which Gray worked was run by Jonathan and William Taft. In addition to this private practice, Jonathan Taft was the cofounder and an early president of the American Dental Association. He was a strong supporter of allowing women into the dental profession. In 1861 he mentored Lucy Hobbs Taylor in the skills of dentistry. She had difficulty finding a dental school to accept her for her formal education, but she was finally admitted to the Ohio College of Dentistry in Cincinnati in 1866 and graduated in 1870. By this time there were 24 known women practicing dentistry in the United States, but Hobbs Taylor became the first woman to earn a dental degree in the country.

When Gray was still in high school, Jonathan Taft was working as the dean of the Ohio College of Dentistry and the editor of the Dental Register. However, in 1875 he became the first dean of the Dental College of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Gray probably spent most of her time working for his brother William Taft, but her acquaintance with Jonathan Taft was instrumental for her career. Within three years after moving to the University of Michigan, Jonathan Taft began admitting women into the Dental College.

Ida Gray Nelson/Rollins

She decided to pursue a career in dentistry and Taft encouraged her to apply at the University of Michigan. Gray had three years of practical experience in a dental office, which helped her pass her mandatory entrance exam. She entered the University of Michigan dental school in October of 1887, two years after Sophia Bethena Jones became the first African-American woman admitted to that university’s medical department (Sophia Bethena Jones will be featured next week). Gray received her doctor of dental surgery degree in June of 1890 becoming the first African-American woman to earn a dental degree in the United States. She was also only the 23rd woman to graduate from the dental school at the University of Michigan. It would be six more years before another African-American woman would earn a dental degree. Mary Imogene Williams (Mary Imogene Williams will be featured next week) became the second black woman to hold such a distinction when she graduated from Howard University’s dental school in 1896.

After earning her degree Gray returned to Cincinnati and opened a private practice on Ninth Street, where she stayed from 1890 until 1895. In March of 1895 Gray married James Sanford Nelson, a Spanish-American War veteran. Nelson was born in Canada in 1860 and emigrated to the United States a decade later. He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in the 1880s. Nelson lived in Chicago where he served as the captain and quartermaster for the National Guard Eighth Regiment. He worked as an accountant and later earned a law degree from the Chicago College of Law in 1897.

Career

Gray moved to Chicago with Nelson in 1895 and set up a private practice at Armour Avenue and 35th Street. She was the first female African-American dentist to practice in the city of Chicago. In 1898 she moved her office into her home on South State Street. She moved both her office and her home to Wabash Avenue in 1903. Gray had a very diverse clientele, serving men and women of all races and ages. She was especially kind to children and served as a role model for many of her young patients. Most notably Gray mentored one of her patients, Olive M. Henderson (of course she will be featured as well), who became the second female African-American dentist in Chicago. She graduated from Northwestern University Dental School in 1912. Aside from mentoring, Gray was also active in many women’s organizations in Chicago. In particular she served as the vice president of the Professional Women’s Club of Chicago.

It was reported that a newspaper editor said of Dr. Gray,

“her blushing, winning ways makes you feel like finding an extra tooth anyway to allow her to pull.”

In 1895, Gray married James S. Nelson, and they moved to Chicago where she spent the rest of her life. Her husband, a Spanish-American and World War I veteran, died in 1926; and she remarried in 1929 to become Mrs. William A. Rollins, a waiter, but was better known as Dr. Ida N. Rollins. She was also the first Black woman to practice dentistry in Chicago and mentored other African-American women into the profession.

She became active in several Chicago women’s organizations, and she was often singled out as an example of what Black women could accomplish.

Personal Life

Gray retired from dentistry in the 1930s and continued to live in Chicago, although she also maintained a summer home in Idlewild, Michigan, which was a popular resort area for black professionals. Her second husband died on June 20, 1944, from injuries sustained in a car accident. Gray remained widowed for the rest of her life and she never had any children with either of her husbands. Ida Gray died on May 3, 1953, in Chicago.

More Related posts:

  1. Mary Ann Shadd Cary: Educator, Activist, 1st African-American Woman Editor in North America and 1st to enroll in Howard University Law School
  2. Carol Parham: 1st African-American and 1st Woman to Serve as Super of Anne Arundel County, MD Public Schools
  3. Kelly Miller: First African-American Mathematics Graduate Student and Influential Founder of Howard’s Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
  4. Georgiana Simpson: One of the 1st African-American Women to Obtain a PhD in America
  5. Anna Julia Cooper: Author, Educator, 4th African-American Women to Earn PhD

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