EDWARDS, MARTIN LUTHER (1900-1970). Martin Luther Edwards, black physician, was born on January 1, 1900, in Columbus, Mississippi, to Simon and Jemima (Williams) Edwards. He attended Clark College in Atlanta, Georgia, and received a bachelor of science degree in 1926. He went on to get a master of science degree from Northwestern University at Evanston, Illinois, in 1927 and a doctor of medicine degree from Meharry Medical College at Nashville, Tennessee, in 1931. After interning at Prairie View A&M College Hospital in Prairie View, Texas, in 1931-32, he began practice in Hawkins, Texas. He was college physician at Jarvis Christian College at Hawkins, where he served without salary for more than fifteen years. During this time he started the school's first health program.
From sometime during World War IIqv until April 1970, Dr. Edwards was a medical examiner for a local
selective-service board. He was the first black physician to hold
full staff privileges at the Medical Center Hospital in Tyler.
He wrote several scientific articles. He was a member of the Smith
County Medical Society, the Texas Medical Association,qv and the American Medical Association. He served as secretary and
president of the Lone Star State Medical, Dental, and Pharmaceutical
Association,qv president of the East Texas Medical, Dental, and Pharmaceutical
Association, and vice president and member of the House of Delegates
of the National Medical Association. He served as secretary to
the board of Texas Southern University in Houston. In the late
1940s he was selected by Texas governor Beauford H. Jesterqv as a member of the state's first biracial committee to seek solutions
to various racial problems. Edwards was appointed to similar committees
in the administrations of governors Allan Shivers and M. Price
Daniel, Sr.qqv
He was a member of Bethlehem United Methodist Church,
Jarvis Christian College Church, Eastern Star Masonic Lodge, and
Omega Psi Phi fraternity. He received the Omega Achievement Award
from Omega Psi Phi in 1955. Edwards and his wife, Arzelia (Jones),
formerly of Kansas City, Kansas, had four children. He died on
April 22, 1970, in Tyler.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Houston Chronicle, April 26,
1970. Texas Medicine, July 1970. Vertical Files, Barker
Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.
John S. Gray III

