History
of the Office of the MIT President
JULIUS
ADAMS STRATTON, 1901-1994
Julius
Adams Stratton, 1901-1994, S.B. 1923 and S.M. 1926 in electrical engineering,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Sc.D. in mathematical physics,
1928, Eidgenossiche Technische Hochshule, Zurich, Switzerland, was the
eleventh president of MIT, 1959-1966. He joined the faculty of MIT as
an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering in
1928; in 1930 he transferred to the Department of Physics where he became
associate professor in 1935 and full professor in 1941. Much of his
research at that time was conducted at the MIT field station at Round
Hill, South Dartmouth, Mass., on the propagation of short electromagnetic
waves. During World War II at the MIT-based Radiation Laboratory he
worked on the development of LORAN (Long Range Navigation), which enables
airplanes and ships to determine their location. In 1942 he became an
expert consultant to Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson. In this post
he chaired committees to improve the effectiveness of all-weather flying
systems and ground radar, fire control, and radar bombing equipment.
He also helped plan the use of radar in the Normandy invasion. He was
awarded the Medal of Merit for his services.
After
the war he became the first director of the new interdisciplinary Research
Laboratory of Electronics at MIT. He was a member of the Committee on
Educational Survey, appointed in 1947 to review the state of education
at the Institute; one of the recommendations of the committee led to
the creation in 1950 of the School of Humanities and Social Science.
In 1949 he was appointed MIT's first provost, and in 1951 he received
a concurrent appointment as vice president. He became MIT's first chancellor
in 1956, acting president in 1957, and president in 1959. At his retirement
in 1966 he was elected a life member of the MIT Corporation. A trustee
of the Ford Foundation, 1955-1971, he served as its chairman from 1966
to 1971. His government service included membership on the National
Science Board, 1956-1962 and 1964-1967, and an appointment by President
Lyndon B. Johnson in 1967 as chairman of the Commission on Marine Science,
Engineering and Resources. Among his many publications is the book Electromagnetic
Theory, first published in 1941 and still in print (as of 1995).
His research focused on communications and theoretical physics.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
November 1995
Photograph courtesy of the MIT Museum