
Oral Histories:
Lovest Alexander – Graduate and professor of the Duke PA program. Has worked his entire PA career to diversify the PA profession (Video).
Jacqueline Barnett – PA educator and director of the Duke PA program (Video).
Kara Caruthers – She is the current President of the PAEA and has always been dedicated to diversifying the PA profession as an educator (Video).
Earl Echard – Founding member of the Minority Affairs Committee (Video).
John Davis – Founding member of the Minority Affairs Committee (Video).
Murl Dotson – One of the few PAs to practice in Mississippi before 2000 and who was instrumental in passing PA legislation in that state (Video).
Joyce Nichols – First female PA. She also helped get the MAC off the ground and was the its first chairperson (Audio).
Terry Scott – Director of the MEDEX Northwest PA program (Video).
Howard Straker – A PA educator that was able to combine his passion with advocacy with his chosen profession as a PA (Video).
Daytheon Sturges – Professor and diversity co-chair at the MEDEX Northwest program. He passionate about aiding underserved populations and diversifying the PA profession (Video).
Joseph Tate – A Vietnam veteran, Tate attended the Howard University PA program and was instrumental in getting California to recognize out-of-state PA degrees. He also helped other important PA practice legislation in California (Audio).
Carl Toney – PA Educator who was recognized in Big Doctoring in America – Profiles in Primary Care (2002) for his efforts of bring healthcare to underserved rural communities.
Steven Turnipseed – A graduate from the first MEDEX Northwest class and a founding member of the Minority Affairs Committee (Video).
Ed Williams – WWII veteran who helped spread the PA concept (Video).
Videos:
Karen Bass – The first PA to sit on the US House of Representatives
Joyce Nichols’s Rural Health Clinic [Photo to the right]
Peggy Valentine – Co-founder of Project Access
Biographies:
Lovest Alexander – PA educator and advocate for the diversity of the PA profession.
Karen Bass – First PA to be elected to US House of Representatives.
Stephanie Bowlin – Graduate of the Charles Drew PA program. Past Chair of the ARC-PA .
John Davis– Founding member of the Minority Affairs Committee.
Earl Echard – Founding member of the Minority Affairs Committee.
Prentiss Harrison – The first African American PA.
Trisha Harris – First African American President of the AAPA Student Academy.
Les Howard – PA educator and advocate for diversity in the PA profession.
Robin Hunter-Buskey – A PA in the US Public Health Service and the first African American Chair of the NCCPA.
Dawn Morton-Rias – First PA to serve as the CEO/Executive Officer of the NCCPA.
Joyce Nichols – She was the first female PA, co-founder of the Minority Affairs Committee, and the Minority Affairs Committee’s first Chair.
Howard Straker – A PA educator, advocate, and Past President of PAEA.
Joseph Tate – A Vietnam veteran and Howard University PA program graduate. Was instrumental in getting California to recognize out-of-state PA degrees.
Carl Toney – PA Educator who was recognized in Big Doctoring in America – Profiles in Primary Care (2002) for his efforts of bring healthcare to underserved rural communities.
Janice Tramel – PA Educator, founding member of the African Heritage Caucus, and the first African American PA to chair a state regulatory/licensing agency.
Henry Lee “Buddy” Treadwell – He was the prototype PA that inspired the creation of the PA profession! [Photo to the right]
Steven Turnipseed – Graduate from the first MEDEX class and also the first African American in the MEDEX Program. He was a founding member of the Minority Affairs Committee.
Peggy Valentine – She was the co-founder of Project Access.
Ed Williams – WWII veteran who graduated from the Howard PA program. He was an influential PA in the DC area and a founding member of the Minority Affairs Committee.
Robert Wooten – The first African American President of the AAPA.
Online Exhibits
From MAC to AHC: The History of the Minority Affairs Committee and the African Heritage Caucus by John Davis.
Profiles in Black – A booklet created by the African Heritage Caucus containing brief biographies of African-American PAs who have become or who are in the process of becoming leaders in the PA profession.


