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Dr. Clinton D. Brown’s Black History Month video offers a powerful reflection on legacy, leadership, and lifelong service rooted in Brooklyn. Raised on Halsey Street in Bedford-Stuyvesant by Jamaican immigrant parents, Dr. Brown shares vivid memories of growing up in a close-knit community during the height of the Civil Rights Movement. He recalls a time when neighbors looked after one another, even amid national unrest marked by war, segregation, and the assassinations of transformative leaders. In a personal and memorable story, he recounts how he received his name, Clinton,” from his sister, while riding the A train as a two-week old baby with his mother and sister on their way to their new home. He’s deeply proud of his name inspired by the Clinton-Washington subway stop. Dr. Brown reflects on his educational journey, including how a medical school convention in New York led to his first interview in medicine. A graduate of Tufts University School of Medicine, he completed his internal medicine residency at Harlem Hospital and fellowships in nephrology at SUNY Downstate and lipid research at The Rockefeller University. He went on to build a distinguished career focused on complex lipid disorders, kidney disease, and cardiovascular health. With more than 40 years of service at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, Dr. Brown has shaped generations of physicians and advanced critical research in health disparities. He has served as Medical Director of the Parkside Hemodialysis Center, Director of the Brooklyn Health Disparities Center, Deputy Chief of Nephrology, Director of the Lipid Clinic, Chair of the Institutional Review Board, and Presiding Officer of the College of Medicine Executive Committee. For three consecutive decades, he has led clinical trials as principal investigator in kidney and cardiovascular disease. His scholarship and leadership earned him recognition from Alpha Omega Alpha in 2020 for professionalism, scholarship, leadership, and service. Beyond medicine, Dr. Brown shares his passions for collecting African American art, jazz albums, and vintage baseball equipment—interests that reflect his deep appreciation for culture and history. In closing, Dr. Brown reminds us that Black history should not be confined to a single month. It deserves recognition and celebration every day.