Three centuries of Black contributions to science, engineering, medicine & progress
The numbers below are not opinions. They are drawn from federal agencies, peer-reviewed research, and publicly available datasets. They document persistent, measurable disparities that continue to shape opportunity in America.
The racial wealth gap is the single most comprehensive measure of cumulative economic inequality.
For every $1 of wealth held by a typical White family, a typical Black family holds roughly 10 cents.
Innovation requires access to education, capital, and networks. The patent gap reflects who has that access.
Black Americans are 13.6% of the population but hold approximately 1% of U.S. patents.
Source: Harvard Business School / USPTO, “Lost Einsteins,” 2019
The pipeline to innovation starts in the classroom. Representation in STEM education remains starkly unequal.
Capital is the fuel of innovation. Who receives it determines whose ideas reach the world.
Of all venture capital invested in the U.S., Black founders receive approximately 1.5%.
Homeownership is the primary wealth-building tool for most Americans. The gap has barely moved in 50 years.
A 29-point gap that has persisted since the Fair Housing Act of 1968.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Housing Vacancies and Homeownership, 2023
Income determines day-to-day opportunity: where you live, what schools your children attend, and whether you can invest in an idea.
Black households earn 63 cents for every dollar earned by White households.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Income and Poverty in the United States, 2022
Illustrative connections — innovators & investors
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Black Innovators CODEX is a living record and pipeline dedicated to honoring Black contributions to science, engineering, and invention -- and to connecting today's innovators with the capital, mentorship, and resources they need to succeed. This is not about us. It is about them.
New innovators who have applied to the Black-Innovator Network. When you sign up, you gain access to a personalized Innovator Dashboard where you can track investor interest, see who has viewed your profile, monitor clicks on your assets, and receive real-time status updates on your application.
The reason I built this is because, as a former history teacher, I used to end every class during Black History Month by highlighting the contributions Black people have made to our world. Over the years, I built up a deep library of Black innovators and their inventions, and I was often struck, and sometimes honestly disturbed, by how little most people know about those contributions.
This site was created to help change that. Its purpose is to shine a light on the history of Black innovation, creativity, and ingenuity, and to show how deeply those contributions have shaped all of our lives. My hope is that by seeing this history more clearly, we can begin to correct the way Black people have so often been undervalued, overlooked, or misunderstood. And in doing so, perhaps we can move, in some small but real way, toward healing at a time when division feels so widespread.
Having lived in as a teacher in China for nearly a decade, I came to appreciate one of the greatest strengths of the United States: that at its best, it is a living tapestry of the world, a place where people from anywhere can contribute something meaningful through perseverance and vision. That does not erase, minimize, or soften the unique suffering endured by Africans and their descendants in America through slavery and its long aftermath. But it is also true that out of that suffering, sacrifice, and struggle came extraordinary strength, beauty, and contribution, which have become the guiding threads that are inseparable from the American story itself.
Conferences, meetups, workshops, and community events for Black innovators, inventors, and STEM professionals.