After earning his doctorate degree, Taylor published physics research under contract with the United States Navy. He then moved on to academia, and joined the faculty of
West Virginia State College (now
West Virginia State University), in
Institute, West Virginia, in 1945 as chairman of the physics department. , in the 1960s In 1949, he joined the faculty at
Morgan State College (now
Morgan State University) in
Baltimore, Maryland. Morgan State and West Virginia State are both
historically Black universities. Taylor was recruited to Morgan State by then-university president
Dr. Martin David Jenkins, who sought to establish a physics department at the university. In 1954, after years of building the physics program, Taylor became the university physics department's first chairman and earned tenure as a professor. During his career, he also served in various scientific committees and societies, including as a liaison to NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center and the
National Science Foundation. He was a member, section representative, and president of the executive committee of the Chesapeake division of the
American Association of Physics Teachers. Along with
Warren Henry, he helped to start a committee on minorities for the
American Physical Society, and started a similarly focused committee for the
American Association of Physics Teachers. Beginning in 1955, Taylor worked as an editor, for "The Negro in Science," a book about prominent African-American scientists and their research accomplishments. Its introduction was written by
Herman Branson. Taylor retired in 1987, and lectured at American University in Washington, D.C., in the years before his retirement. In 1987 he also became professor emeritus at Morgan State University and continued teaching there part-time until 1999. There is a Julius H. Taylor Endowed Scholarship Fund named for Taylor at Morgan State University. Throughout his career and after retirement, Taylor mentored students in the
Baltimore Public School system. == Athletic accomplishments ==