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Bessie Coleman: The Quiet Radical Who Broke Barriers
Bessie Coleman never set out to be a trailblazer, but history made her one anyway. Born in 1892 in Texas to an African American mother and a Native American father, Coleman grew up during the Jim Crow era, in a society structured to exclude her on the basis of both race and gender. Discrimination and segregation were not abstract concepts; they shaped the reality of her everyday life from an early age. In 1915, Coleman moved from Texas to Chicago, joining the Great Migration
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2 min read


Engineering Excellence and Courage: In Conversation with Dr. Nike Folayan MBE
When Dr. Nike Folayan MBE talks about her childhood, she doesn’t begin with titles, accolades, or the corridors of influence she now frequently walks. She begins with service. As a pioneering engineer who “saves lives”, her career journey has been shaped by variety, curiosity and resilience. A Childhood of Curiosity Born to Nigerian parents in London, Dr. Nike says she grew up in a home “that really valued giving back.” Her father, a mechanical engineer, encouraged curiosity
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5 min read


Dr. Walt Braithwaite: The Jamaican Engineer who Changed the Aerospace Industry
Before Canva’s drag and drop and the world of AI, one Jamaican man was already 20 years ahead of the curve. While the world was still...
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2 min read
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