Wallis Whitney, the pioneer of research and development laboratories, carried into his world of science the belief that all the old knowledge and even the definitions of invention were enemies of progress. He saw his role as director of the lab at General Electric as following the opening of acceptable new ideas, watching the growth of thought in the minds and hands of investigators. A research laboratory, Whitney said, "was not where assignments were fulfilled, but the art of profiting from unexpected occurrences." Habit and procedures were an obstacle to the pursuit of the unknown in Whitney's mind.
In the area of current thought of his time, it was believed that streetcars would one day reach into every alley of every town in America, and that electric lighting was the final improvement in street lighting. Whitney, however, saw a future with new modes of transportation that were far more efficient than the street car. On electricity, he wondered if there might be some way of putting "phosphors" into the cement of the roadways and highways to collect and store cheap daylight and use it at night to make the streets safer and travel easier. He believed it would make street lighting obsolete.
Whitney had that kind of mind, and became the apostle of the industrial research lab which would grow and flourish in the coming decades with giants of the industrial world. Electricity was just the beginning.
Next time...Industrial R&D flourishes
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Today in Pioneer History: "On May 21, 1881, Clara Barton and Adolphus Solomons found the American Red Cross, an organization established to provide humanitarian aid to victims of wars and natural disasters. Barton, was known as the "angel of the battlefield" during the Civil War, and afterwards was commissioned to search for lost prisoners of war by President Lincoln. The American Red Cross received it first federal charter in 1900. Barton headed the organization into her 80s and died in 1912. Hats off to nurses everywhere!
Showing posts with label General Electric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Electric. Show all posts
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Monday, May 11, 2020
Wallis R Whitney
"Electricity is a carrier of light and power, devourer of time and space, bearer of human speech over land and sea, greatest servant of man - yet itself unknown." --Charles W. Eliot as inscribed on the Union Depot in Washington, D.C. The pioneer American industrial research laboratory founded by General Electric in 1900 chose as its mission to explore and discover this great unknown - electricity. General Electric had grown out of the Edison Electric Light Company and needed a talented man to head their research laboratory. They found him in Wallis R. Whitney.
Wallis R. Whitney was the son of a chair manufacturer and expected to follow in the trades like his father. However, in high school Wallis became interested in science when he got his first look under a microscope. His parents granted his wish for a microscope of his own and he went on to Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he graduated in chemistry in 1890. Whitney received his doctorate in Leipzig, Germany two year later. After attending the Sorbonne, he returned to MIT where he was a professor of chemistry. There he developed an electro-chemical theory of corrosion.
Whitney was 32 years old when General Electric came to call. His first response to their offer was, "I'd rather teach than be President!" At that time scientific research was indeed centered in colleges and universities and the idea of a company R&D was unheard of. But when Edison had decided to become a businessman and no longer an inventor, General Electric went in search of someone who could take the reins in research and development.
Whitney had some help in the face of Charles P. Steinmetz, the company's consulting engineer. Steinmetz had made advancements in electrical alternating currents, but he was a loner, and he didn't have the personality to be the head of a research and development laboratory. Whitney did.
Next time...New ideas, new materials and new products
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Today in Pioneer History: "On May 11, 1934, dust storms sweep from the Great Plains across Eastern States as millions of tons of topsoil form the Great Dust Bowl in the United States. The prairie grass that once covered the Great Plains was gone, plowed over by the pioneer farmers who had settled there. Drought in the area causes the wind began to carry the soil away and for two days some 350 million tons of silt made it all the way to the eastern seaboard.
Wallis R. Whitney was the son of a chair manufacturer and expected to follow in the trades like his father. However, in high school Wallis became interested in science when he got his first look under a microscope. His parents granted his wish for a microscope of his own and he went on to Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he graduated in chemistry in 1890. Whitney received his doctorate in Leipzig, Germany two year later. After attending the Sorbonne, he returned to MIT where he was a professor of chemistry. There he developed an electro-chemical theory of corrosion.
Whitney was 32 years old when General Electric came to call. His first response to their offer was, "I'd rather teach than be President!" At that time scientific research was indeed centered in colleges and universities and the idea of a company R&D was unheard of. But when Edison had decided to become a businessman and no longer an inventor, General Electric went in search of someone who could take the reins in research and development.
Whitney had some help in the face of Charles P. Steinmetz, the company's consulting engineer. Steinmetz had made advancements in electrical alternating currents, but he was a loner, and he didn't have the personality to be the head of a research and development laboratory. Whitney did.
Next time...New ideas, new materials and new products
___________________________________
Today in Pioneer History: "On May 11, 1934, dust storms sweep from the Great Plains across Eastern States as millions of tons of topsoil form the Great Dust Bowl in the United States. The prairie grass that once covered the Great Plains was gone, plowed over by the pioneer farmers who had settled there. Drought in the area causes the wind began to carry the soil away and for two days some 350 million tons of silt made it all the way to the eastern seaboard.
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