Eugene T. Hinson (1873-1960)

September 11, 2023 
/ Contributed By: Leroy Nunery

Eugene T. Hinson|Eugene T. Hinson

Eugene T. Hinson

From The New York Public Library

Eugene T. Hinson was one of six founders of Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity, the oldest African American Greek Letter Fraternity in the United States. The others were Henry Minton, Algernon Jackson, Edwin Howard, Richard Warrick, and Robert Jones Abele. Eugene T. Hinson was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on November 20, 1873. He attended the Octavius Catto Public School, which was located on 20th & Lombard Streets. He, like other Fraternity founders, also attended the Institute for Colored Youth, which is now Cheyney University. At the Institute, he excelled scholastically and athletically, particularly in baseball.

Following graduation from the Institute in 1891, Hinson taught in Hartford County, Maryland. He then returned to the Institute for Colored Youth, where he taught in its high school. Teaching, however, was a pathway to his real ambition, the practice of medicine. Eugene Hinson entered the Medical Department at the University of Pennsylvania, graduating with his M.D. degree in 1898 with honors. Hinson’s desire to secure an internship in Philadelphia hospitals, however, was thwarted by racism, and he accepted a position at Douglass Hospital, a small 20-bed institution that was recently established to provide medical services to Philadelphiaโ€™s African American residents.

Dr. Hinson left Douglass Hospital in 1905 and joined the founding group of the Mercy Hospital Corporation. This was a groundbreaking achievement as the Mercy Hospital staff would be the first in the city to be racially integrated. Mercy Hospital opened in February 1907. Dr. Hinson led Mercyโ€™s gynecological department, and his considerable skills as a surgeon led to him having a significant practice with both Black and white patients.

Eugene Hinson was active in the Lombard Central Presbyterian Church, where he attained the distinction of Leading Elderโ€”the highest post for a layman. As further testament to his varied interests and involvements, he was a member of the National Medical Association (the predominantly Black physiciansโ€™ professional organization) and the newly racially integrated American Medical Association, the largest professional physicianโ€™s organization in the U.S. as well as its constituent societies. Dr. Hinson was a pioneer member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, and the Alumni Association of the Institute for Colored Youth.

Another example of Hinson’s foresight and dedication to education, especially for African American youth, was his donation of some of his family farm property in Oxford, Pennsylvania, to help found Lincoln University.

Eugene T. Hinson was married to Marie Hopewell, and for most of their lives, the couple lived at 1333 South 19th Street in Philadelphia. They had no children. Archon Hinson died at his home in Philadelphia on June 7, 1960, at the age of 86.

About the Author

Author Profile

Dr. Leroy (Lee) David Nunery II is an accomplished executive and entrepreneur. His consulting firm, PlลซsUltrรฉ LLC has focused on strategic planning, organizational transformations, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) strategies.

PlลซsUltrรฉ was commissioned by the National African American Insurance Association (NAAIA) and Marsh Companies to author โ€œThe Journey of African American Insurance Professionals: Past and Presentโ€ and โ€œThe Next Steps on the Journeyโ€. Dr. Nunery has also authored two DEI catalogs for the American Property Casualty Insurance Association (APCIA), and is recognized as a subject matter expert on DEI throughout the industry.

In November 2021, Dr. Nunery was named President of Evolution Advisors, LLC, whose mission is to help minority agencies fuel their growth through scale, technology, and proprietary products and resources.

Among other honors, Dr. Nunery has received the Wallace L. Jones Lifetime Achievement Award by the Consortium for Graduate Study in Management, and the Alumni Achievement and Community Engagement Award from Washington Universityโ€™s Gephardt Institute. Since 2002, Lafayette College has presented the Leroy D. Nunery Scholarship Award for Intellectual Citizenship.

Dr. Nunery has extensive governance experience which now includes the Cheyney University Council of Trustees, Independence Blue Cross Regional Advisory Committee, the West Oak Lane Charter School Foundation, and Chair of the Board of Governors an affordable housing initiative, โ€œ360 Community Capitalโ€ sponsored by the American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI). He is a Lifetime Member of the National Black MBA Association, Inc., and served as National President (1983 โ€“ 1987).

Dr. Nunery is a graduate of Lafayette College (B.A., Honors in History, 1977), Washington University (M.B.A., 1979), and the University of Pennsylvania (Ed.D., 2003). He is a proud member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc., and Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Nunery, L. (2023, September 11). Eugene T. Hinson (1873-1960). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/eugene-t-hinson-1873-1960/

Source of the Author's Information:

Rodney J. Reed, A Grand Journey: The History of Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity, 1904-2000 (Atlanta: Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity, 2021); Charles H. Wesley, History of Sigma Pi Phi: First of the Negro-American Greek Letter Fraternities (Atlanta: Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity, 1993).

Further Reading