FOUNDER VIGNETTE:
Marcus Peter Blakemore

Achievements

  • Served as a private in World War I
  • First Black to receive MS degree in Prosthetic Dentistry from the University of Pittsburgh Dental School
  • Wired the first Fraternity house for electricity
  • Charter member of the Pittsburgh (PA) Alumni Chapter
  • Practiced dentistry for 35 years
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Marcus Peter Blakemore

Founder

Founder Marcus Peter Blakemore was a man of deep religious convictions and quiet confidence. He contributed significantly to education, his community, church, hospitals, and fraternity. Blakemore, affectionately known as “Blakie,” was born in Franklin, Indiana, on January 3, 1889, and was the eldest of four children.

Blakemore’s family moved to Anderson, Indiana, where he attended public schools and graduated high school in 1909. He entered Indiana University the following year. After leaving Indiana University in the spring term of 1912, he organized the Electric Engineering Company, which he operated until he enlisted with the U.S. Army in World War I. Blakemore served in the U.S. Army as the rank of Private with the 30th Company, 154th Depot Brigade. He was honorably discharged in August 1918 and married Azalea Hall the following month. They had one daughter, Elizabeth.

He earned his Bachelor of Science from the University of Pittsburgh and graduated from its Dental School with a D.D.S. degree in 1923. In 1949, Blakemore became the first Black to receive an M.S. degree in Prosthetic Dentistry from the University of Pittsburgh Dental School.

Blakemore was a member of national and local Dental Societies and a staunch member of Ebenezer Baptist Church, having served as a trustee and a clarinet soloist.

Blakemore was a roommate of Byron K. Armstrong in the rooming house of Ms. Molly Spaulding. He was one of the two Founders who pawned his watch to help raise the Fraternity’s incorporation fee. Blakemore was one of the first three freshmen initiates of Kappa Alpha Nu. He wired the first Fraternity house for electricity, the first Negro home ever wired for electricity in Bloomington. He was a charter member of the Pittsburgh (PA) Alumni Chapter and was instrumental in establishing the Beta Epsilon Chapter.

Blakemore maintained his dentistry practice in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for 35 years until his death on October 9, 1959, and is buried at Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

 

Achievements

  • Served as a private in World War I
  • First Black to receive MS degree in Prosthetic Dentistry from the University of Pittsburgh Dental School
  • Wired the first Fraternity house for electricity
  • Charter member of the Pittsburgh (PA) Alumni Chapter
  • Practiced dentistry for 35 years