Sunday, August 24

Here’s a full profile of Alice Ball, a pioneering African American chemist whose work changed medicine:


Alice Augusta Ball

Born: July 24, 1892 – Seattle, Washington, USA
Died: December 31, 1916 – Honolulu, Hawaii (age 24)
Profession: Chemist, researcher, professor
Known For: Developing the “Ball Method”, the first effective treatment for leprosy (Hansen’s disease).


Early Life

  • Born into a well-educated, middle-class Black family in Seattle.
  • Fascinated by chemistry from a young age.
  • Earned degrees in pharmaceutical chemistry (1912) and pharmacy (1914) from the University of Washington.
  • In 1915, she became the first woman and first African American to earn a master’s degree in chemistry from the University of Hawaii.

Scientific Breakthrough – The Ball Method

  • At age 23, while teaching at the University of Hawaii, she researched chaulmoogra oil, a traditional remedy for leprosy.
  • Problem: The oil was sticky and hard to inject, making it ineffective.
  • Alice discovered a way to chemically modify the oil into injectable, water-soluble compounds.
  • Her treatment, known as the Ball Method, became the world’s leading treatment for leprosy until the 1940s (when antibiotics replaced it).

Untimely Death & Recognition

  • Tragically, Alice Ball died in 1916 at just 24 years old, likely from chemical exposure during her research.
  • For years, her work was not properly credited — another chemist, Arthur L. Dean, continued her research but initially failed to acknowledge her contribution.

Honors & Legacy

  • 2000: University of Hawaii honored her with a plaque and declared “Alice Ball Day” (February 29, celebrated every 4 years).
  • 2007: Featured in the book Breaking Through the Clouds: The Life of Dr. Margaret Tobin Brown.
  • 2017: Added to the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine’s frieze honoring global medical pioneers.
  • 2022: Included in the “American Women Quarters Program” — Alice Ball appeared on a U.S. quarter coin.
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