He also collaborated with Professor George Beal on a paper published in Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry titled, "The Hydrochloride Method for the Determination of Alkaloids."
Professor Brady also authored monographs entitled Household Chemistry for Girls (1916) and Elements of Metallurgy for Dental Students (1924).
in chemistry in 1914 and carried out his Ph.D. thesis work at Noyes Laboratory under the direction of Derick, writing a dissertation in 1916 titled "The Divalent Oxygen Atom.
[8] The research Brady carried out at Fisk resulted in several publications, including a 1938 paper in the Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Society on the phytochemicals in the seed of the magnolia, and a 1939 paper in the Journal of the American Chemical Society on the reactions of ricinoleic acid.
Brady's principal legacy was his establishment of strong undergraduate curricula, graduate programs, and fundraising development for four historically black colleges and universities.