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Norbert Rillieux: The Man who Revolutionized the Sugar Industry Worldwide

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February is Black History Month. And what better way to celebrate than to lift from obscurity African Americans who played crucial roles in this country’s scientific, cultural and industrial progress. Their achievements saved thousands of lives, made the lives of many Americans easier and in some instances changed the course of history. And yet, they are largely forgotten by the world they helped to change for the better. In this series, we will highlight some of these under-appreciated and forgotten men and women.

His was an invention that gained worldwide significance. He revolutionized the world’s sugar industry, and yet not many people know his name.

Norbert Rillieux, whose mother was a freed slave, was born March 17, 1806 on a New Orleans plantation. His father, the plantation’s owner, sent him to Paris, France for his education; perhaps because a proper education was unavailable in New Orleans for blacks, no matter their status.

“In Paris, Norbert turned out to be a brilliant student at L’Ecole Centrale,” according to Louis Haber, author of Black Pioneers of Science and Inventions. “He showed an extraordinary aptitude for engineering and at the age of twenty-four became an instructor of applied mechanics at L’ Ecole Centrale.”

He published many papers on steam engine and it was there that he developed the theory of multiple-effect evaporation that was to be the basis for his “precedent-shattering invention,” Haber wrote.

Rillieux learned that the boiling point of liquids is reduced as the pressure is reduced (like in a vacuum), according to Enchantedlearning.com. He applied this to the processing of sugar, heating the cane sugar in a vacuum, and re-using the steam in the processing procedure. This resulted in a highly efficient mechanical process that replaced the laborious, dangerous, and costly method of processing sugar by using a team of slaves called the “Jamaica train,” according to the online site.

Until 1846, the transformation of sugarcane juice into sugar was done by this primitive method. Some say that method may have left a mark on Rillieux.

“Perhaps Rillieux’s interest in the sugar refining process stemmed from his memory of seeing gangs of sweating slaves in New Orleans painfully pouring and ladling boiling sugarcane juice from one steaming, open kettle to another,” Haber wrote.

The resulting sugar tended to be of low quality since the heat in the kettles could not be regulated, and much sugar was lost in the process of transferring juice from kettle to kettle, according to a report by the American Chemical Society.

Rillieux wanted to find a way to refine and granulate sugar that produce the same sweetness but with less waste, without a team of slaves and without the crude effects.

Sugar is caramelized by high heat. With a vacuum the pressure is reduced during boiling. With a partial vacuum, the boiling temperature can be kept below the point at which caramelization takes place. Two scientists had developed vacuum pans with condensing coils that used heat in evaporating the liquid portion of the sugarcane juice. But their method was imperfect, Haber wrote.

Rillieux’s method enclosed the condensing coils in a vacuum chamber, allowing the vapor from the first condensing chamber to evaporate in a second chamber under a higher volume. The higher the vacuum, the lower the temperature needed to evaporate the liquid.

“The principles involved in this plan laid the foundation for all modern industrial evaporation,” Haber wrote.

Rillieux, who had returned to Louisiana, attempted to design an evaporator in 1834 and 1841, but they failed. In 1843, he was convinced to try again by a plantation owner and this time it was a success, producing sugar that was high in quality, Haber wrote.

The news spread. Rillieux had revolutionized the sugar industry by producing high-quality sugar at a cheaper price. Now only one person was needed to operate the machine through outside valves. The loss of sugar was also reduced while the quality had increased. Rillieux obtained patents for his inventions on Aug. 26, 1843 and Dec. 10, 1846.

Rillieux’s multi-effect vacuum evaporating chamber, a bulky locomotive-sized apparatus containing a network of condensing coils for evaporating the raw cane juice, grew in popularity.

“Soon factories all over Louisiana were installing the ‘Rillieux System,” Haber wrote. “Cuba and Mexico followed soon after.”

It was also used at thousands of other plantations throughout the southeastern United States and the Caribbean, according to Madehow.com.

“Eventually, refined sugar crystals, which were a specialty item, became an ordinary commodity for which refiners found increasing markets,” according to the online site.

Today the process of evaporation in multiple effects is also used in the manufacture of condensed milk, soap, gelatin, and glue, and in the recovery of waste liquors in distilleries and paper factories, Haber wrote.

But despite his success Rillieux, who would often speak out about injustice, was a social pariah. Though he was not a slave, he was still black and was not accepted at the home of whites/

The pending Civil War brought even more restrictions for Rillieux and his race. They could not venture down the streets of New Orleans without permission and failing to leave the city when ordered meant years of imprisonment and hard labor. Rillieux took exception to this and was ordered to carry a pass, Haber wrote. It was too much for Rillieux and in 1854, he left. But not before trying to save many of its citizens.

Yellow fever, which was being carried by certain type of mosquitoes that breed only in water, was killing many. Rillieux worked out an engineering plan that would drain the swamps and get rid of the mosquitoes breeding ground, Haber wrote. But the plan was turned down because it came from a black man, Haber said. Years later, the city was forced to install a similar plan, he said.

Rillieux was now living in Paris and when France was producing most of its sugar from sugar beets, he applied his evaporating-plan process and in 1881 patented a process of heating juices with vapors in multiple effect, which is still used in cane and beet sugar factories throughout the world, Haber wrote.

Despite the world-wide impact of his inventions, Rillieux is virtually unknown. His name does not appear in chemistry or physics textbooks or in technical journals, Haber wrote. Still, in his book, Technology of Sugar, published in London in 1903, J. G. McIntosh wrote on the development and advantages of Rillieux’s inventions.

“This is the system which constitutes the basis of all saving in fuel hitherto effected in sugar factories. Rillieux may therefore, with all justice, be regarded as one of the greatest benefactors of the sugar industry.”

Rillieux died in Paris, France on Oct. 8, 1894. More than 30 years later, a worldwide movement began to honor Rillieux. It began in Holland and grew to include organizations that represented every sugar-producing country in the world. A bronze plaque of Rillieux was designed in Amsterdam, Haber wrote. It’s now on display in the Louisiana State Museum in New Orleans, he said.

In 2002, the American Chemical Society designated the invention of the multiple-effect evaporator under vacuum a National Historic Chemical Landmark, according to invent.org.

Black History

Coco Gauff Becomes the Youngest Flag Bearer in US Olympic History

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During the Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony, the female American flag bearer will be Coco Gauff, the 20-year-old tennis star. She will be the youngest flag bearer in American Olympic history. Basketball legend LeBron James has been selected as the male flag bearer.

Gauff said, “I was not expecting that.”

Delighted to be selected, Gauff admitted she has “no idea” what her assignment includes, adding, “I don’t know if there’s flag bearer-training I have to go to.”

James has been to the Olympics four times. He was part of U.S. teams that won bronze in 2004, gold at Beijing in 2008 and gold again in London in 2012.

But this will be his first time as the flag bearer.

He said, “It’s an absolute honor. I hope I continue to make my community proud and continue to make my family proud.”

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Black History

California Is the First State to Create A Public Alert for Missing Black Youth

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It’s been 21 years since Cleashandria Hall disappeared from Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Her mother Laurell Hall says she dropped her 18-year-old daughter off at her after-school job and never saw her again. For years, Hall and her family have kept their loved ones name in the media by hosting vigils and events that remind the public of their steadfast hope for answers.

But the attention is unusual. More often than not, experts say Black people who go missing do not receive the coverage as whites.

In October 2023, the state of California passed legislation that alerts the public to the disappearance of young people. It’s called the Ebony Alert, and it hopes to change the narrative about Black youth who are missing but don’t receive the same media coverage as white youth.

“We feel it’s well beyond time that we dedicate something specifically to help bring these young women and girls back home because they’re missed and loved just as much as their counterparts are,” State Senator Steven Bradford said in an interview with NBC News.

The recent docuseries about a California woman who faked her disappearance garnered 3.6 million viewers on Hulu, making it the most popular docuseries ever on the streaming service– a distinction that adds more credibility to the ongoing conversation about the disparities in media coverage and public attention when Black Americans are missing.

 Sherri Papini grabbed the spotlight in 2016 as authorities searched for her before she reappeared and years later admitted the hoax. The popularity of the docuseries has reignited the dismay Black families experience when their loved ones are missing.

According to the Black and Missing Foundation, Black Americans make up 40% of missing Americans but only 13% of the population.  

Foundation Founder Natalie Wilson said, “There’s a need for an Ebony Alert because people of color are disappearing at an alarming rate, and typically their cases are under the radar when it comes to media coverage and getting law enforcement resources.”

The Ebony Alert is activated when local authorities request it because a Black youth is missing, and there is concern the youth has been targeted for trafficking, or foul play is suspected. The Ebony Alert uses electronic highway signs and encouraged radio, TV, and social media and other systems to spread information about the missing persons’ alert.

In 2022, California began the Feather Alert which publicizes the disappearance of Indigenous people.

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Black History

First Black Manhattan District Attorney Wins Historic Felony Convictions Against  Donald Trump

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Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg led the investigation that resulted in the first felony conviction of a former United States President, Donald Trump. Bragg’s case centered on the hush money paid to Stormy Daniels, a porn actor who said she and Trump had sex in 2006. The trial involved charges that Trump falsified business records to cover up the payment to Daniels.

 “While this defendant may be unlike any other in American history, we arrived at this trial and ultimately today at this verdict in the same manner as every other case that comes to the courtroom doors,” Bragg said during a press conference after the jury’s verdict was announced. “By following the facts and the law and doing so without fear or favor.”

Trump and his Republican supporters have accused Bragg of “weaponizing” the judicial system.

“This was a disgrace,” Trump said. “This was a rigged trial by a conflicted judge who was corrupt as a rigged trial, a disgrace. The real verdict is going to be November 5th by the people. And they know what happened here and everybody knows what happened here.”

Who is Alvin Bragg

In 2021, Bragg became the first African American elected as the District Attorney for New York County covering Manhattan. He graduated from Harvard Law School and has served as an Assistant Attorney General at the New York State Attorney General’s Office and as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. Bragg is a former member of the Board of Directors of the New York Urban League and the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and a Sunday School teacher at his church.

Political Science professor, Sekou Franklin, said, “Bragg took a big risk bringing the case against former President Donald Trump. Undoubtedly, this risk is both personal and political. Despite this challenge, his willingness to prosecute Trump took great courage.”

Trump’s litany of indictments started when he left office in 2020 after losing the White House to President Joe Biden. Charges of Trump’s attempts to overthrow the 2020 election continue to generate investigations and outrage. African American prosecutors have led three of the most significant cases.

In Georgia, Trump was indicted, along with 18 of his allies, for attempting to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis brought the charges; however, the case became overshadowed by controversy when Willis was accused of hiring Nathan Wade as the special prosecutor because she was in a romantic relationship with him. Judge Scott McAfee declined to disqualify Willis, a decision Trump and his team are challenging.

Earlier this year New York State Attorney General Letitia James handed Trump a defeat after a New York judge ordered him and his business trust to pay $453.5 million in penalties and interest as part of his civil fraud case. The judge ruled that Trump fraudulently inflated the value of his real estate holdings when applying for loans.

But the latest convictions on 34 felony counts against the former President known for his boundary-breaking is historic.

“Alvin Bragg represents the new wave of prosecutors who have strong ties to public impact and community lawyering,” said Franklin, a professor at Middle Tennessee State. “Many of these prosecutors were elected as a result of protests that targeted racialized violence by law enforcement.”

Trump has described James, Willis and Bragg as “racists” – a thinly veiled attempt to tap into a vein of ingrained racism in the nation. The Republican Party lamented the convictions, decrying the trial as a political attack and a “shameful” day in American history.

Democrats view the convictions as an opportunity to sharpen their arguments that Trump is unfit to lead the nation domestically or represent America globally.

Trump faces up to four years in prison. His sentencing is set for July 11 – days before the start of the Republican National Convention.

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