Elihu Thomson
Categories: Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Engineer stubs | 1853 births | 1937 deaths | Electrical engineers
Elihu Thomson (March 29, 1853 – March 13, 1937) was an engineer who was instrumental in the founding of major electrical companies in the United States, Britain and France.
Biography
He was born in Manchester (England) on 29 March 1853, but his family moved to Philadelphia in 1858. In 1879 he established, with Edwin J. Houston, the Thomson-Houston Electric Company. In 1892 this merged with the Edison General Electric Company to become the General Electric Company. Thomson's name is further commemorated by the British Thomson-Houston Company (BTH), and the French companies Thomson and Alstom. His early companies are also involved in the history of The General Electric Company Limited (GEC) in Britain and the Compagnie Général d'Electricité in France.
Thomson was the first recipient of the AIEEs (now IEEE) Edison Medal, bestowed upon him in 1909 "For meritorious achievement in electrical science, engineering and arts as exemplified in his contributions thereto during the past thirty years."
He served as acting president of MIT in 1920.
External links
| Image:MIT.gif Presidents of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
| William Barton Rogers (1862–1870, 1879–1881) | John Daniel Runkle (1870–1878) | Francis Amasa Walker (1881–1897) | James Crafts (1897–1900) | Henry Smith Pritchett (1900–1907) | Arthur Amos Noyes (acting 1907–1909) | Richard Cockburn Maclaurin (1909–1920) | Elihu Thomson (acting 1920–1921, 1922–1923) | Ernest Fox Nichols (1921–1922) | Samuel Wesley Stratton (1923–1930) | Karl Taylor Compton (1930–1948) | James Rhyne Killian (1948–1959) | Julius Adams Stratton (1959–1966) | Howard Wesley Johnson (1966–1971) | Jerome Wiesner (1971–1980) | Paul Edward Gray (1980–1990) | Charles Marstiller Vest (1990–2004) | Susan Hockfield (2004—) |