DID YOU KNOW THAT?
December 1, 1882 - John Alexander Sommerville, businessman
and politician, was born in Jamaica. Sommerville immigrated to the United
States in 1900 and in 1903 entered the University of Southern California School
of Dentistry. His white classmates were so opposed to his presence that they
threatened to boycott the class. Sommerville persisted and in 1907 graduated
first in his class with the highest score recorded at the time. He also was the
first black person to graduate from the school. Sommerville opened a dental
office in Los Angeles, California and became the first black member of the Los
Angeles Chamber of Commerce. In 1914, Sommerville and his wife founded the Los
Angeles chapter of the National Association of Colored People and built a
26-unit apartment building for African Americans. In 1928, they opened the
Hotel Sommerville. In 1936, Sommerville became the first black delegate to the
California Democratic National Convention and from 1949 to 1953 he served as
the first black appointed to the Los Angeles Police Commission. In 1954, he was
declared an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his contributions to
Anglo-American relations. Sommerville published his autobiography, “Man of
Color, An Autobiography of Dr. J. Alexander Sommerville: A Factual Report on
the Status of the American Negro Today,” in 1949. Sommerville died in 1973 and
today portraits of he and his wife hang in the USC dental school with the
inscription “Do not wait for your ship to come in. Row out and meet it.” Also,
Sommerville Place was established at USC as an African American themed
residential community for freshmen students
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