Harold Eugene Edgerton, 1903-1990.

Papers, 1889-1990.

Manuscript Collection - MC 25

Introduction and Biographical Note | Series Descriptions | Scope and Content Note | How to Use the Collection | Related Collections

Personal and family information - Return to MC 25 Home Page

MC 25 differs from most other collections of scientific papers in that it contains rich and varied documentation of personal activities, allowing one to trace connections between professional accomplishments and the personal background to them.

The bulk of personal and family information is found in the biographical series (box 1, folder 1; box 9, folder 1, and boxes 117-130, 139, 140, 142, 146), which greatly enriches the collection by affording insights into HEE's background, feelings, interpersonal relations, and recreation. Personal reflections about himself and those close to him are recorded in autobiographical fragments (box 1, folders 2-9) as well as in audiotapes made at family gatherings (boxes 139-142). Family history is preserved in photograph albums (boxes 119-125), audiotapes (boxes 139, 140, 142), and an Edgerton family tree (box 4, folder 6). Of special interest are tapes containing anecdotes about HEE's youthful adventures in the 1920s (box 146) and interviews with his young grandchildren (box 140).

Additional personal and family information is included in HEE's laboratory notebooks (box 50, folder 6; box 57, folder 5) and travel notebooks (box 90, folder 7; box 104, folder 7). Both sources contain regular entries of a professional nature mixed with brief notes and occasional photographs documenting personal activities, including visitors entertained, vacations taken, dinners attended, and even births and marriages.

Documentation of HEE's personality and personal interactions is richly preserved in letters from friends, colleagues, and former students sent upon the occasion of his formal retirement from MIT in 1968 (box 3, folders 5-9). These letters record memories about HEE and recount specific anecdotes about incidents in his life.

HEE's personal taste in music, skills as a guitar player, and enthusiasm for singing are amply reflected by several sound recordings featuring his musical performances at family gatherings (boxes 139-142).

Photographic accomplishments, including development of innovations in stroboscopic lighting and underwater photography - Return to MC 25 Home Page

HEE learned basic photographic skills while a student in Nebraska in the early 1920s. In 1926, while a graduate student at MIT, he used a primitive stroboscope to study engines. By adjusting the frequency of the strobe's flashes to the rotation speed of the whirling parts of a motor, he was able to observe the parts as if they were stationary. In 1931 he developed and improved strobes and used them to freeze objects in motion so that they could be captured on film by a camera. In the same year he developed techniques to use the strobe for ultra-high-speed movies. Adjustments and improvements by HEE to stroboscopic technologies continued throughout his career.

His improvements to strobes and development of possible applications for them are detailed in the laboratory notebooks (box 50, folder 6; box 57, folder 5), where regular entries illustrate the evolution of an idea, recording inspirations, problems addressed, materials and techniques tried, often through trial and error, and workable solutions. The notebooks include photographs of equipment and diagrams of circuits as well as images illustrating the results obtained by stroboscopic photography. Additional notes, diagrams, and photos are located in technical specifications and plans (box 59, folder 6; box 73, folder 10), research projects (box 73, folder 11; box 83, folder 4, and box 135), writings (box 104, folder 8; box 114, folder 10), and patents files (box 4, folder 10, and box 90, folders 2-5).

Some narrative information about the development of stroboscopes is recorded by HEE in the autobiographical materials he wrote in the 1970s and 1980s (box 1, folders 2-9). Additional information is found among the many newspaper and magazine articles written about his accomplishments and located in biographical folders (box 5, folder 1 ; box 9, folder 1), an obituary folder (box 4, folder 8), and several volumes of scrapbooks (boxes 126-130). HEE also described his work with strobes in several speeches (boxes 141, 143).

HEE's development and testing of the D-5 flash unit for nighttime photography of enemy activities in World War II is described in detail in the nighttime aerial surveillance files (box 77, folder 1 ; box 81, folder 7).

His improvements to underwater photography by devising pressure-resistant camera housings and workable underwater lights and pingers (for determining the height of a photographic unit above the sea floor) are recorded in correspondence with French oceanographer Jacques Cousteau (box 14, folder 4; box 15, folder 1) and the National Geographic Society (box 31, folder 6; box 34, folder 13), as well as in laboratory notebooks (box 50, folder 6; box 57, folder 5), technical specifications and plans (box 59, folder 6 ; box 73, folder 10), writings (box 104, folder 8; box 114, folder 10), and research projects files (box 73, folder 11 ; box 83, folder 4, and boxes 139, 142, 143).

HEE was aware of the commercial and artistic value of many of his photographs, although he preferred to emphasize the scientific and human interest aspects of his work. Many of the prints which have come to be regarded as fine art are reproduced in books by HEE (box 105, folder 47; box 110, folder 14; and box 113, folder 8) and in anthologies reproducing his photographs in an artistic context (box 138). Exhibits and portfolios of his prints are discussed in HEE's correspondence with the Smithsonian Institution (box 41, folder 9), Jean Philippe Charbonnier (box 13, folder 5), Eastman House (box 16, folder 14), and Gus Kayafas (box 24, folder 2). HEE's friend Gjon Mili discusses the artistic meaning of high-speed photography (box 29, folder 11) in his correspondence with HEE, who developed many of the techniques used and popularized by Mili.

HEE's interest in sports photography, including boxing, golf, football, and tennis, is documented by notes and prints in laboratory notebooks (box 50, folder 6; box 57, folder 5) and scrapbooks (boxes 126-130). His correspondence with Vannevar Bush includes a discussion of baseball photography (box 12, folder 11).

Nature photography, including development of units to capture the motion of hummingbird wings without harming the animals, is discussed in HEE's correspondence with Crawford Greenewalt (box 20, folders 6-7), the National Geographic Society (box 31, folder 6; box 34, folder 13), and the Denver Museum of Natural History (box 16, folder 1), as well as in writings (box 104, folder 8; box 114, folder 10), trips files (box 50, folder 7; box 104, folder 7), and research projects files (box 73, folder 11; box 83, folder 4).

Underwater exploration, including work with Jacques-Yves Cousteau - Return to MC 25 Home Page

HEE designed the first successful underwater camera in 1937 and deep sea electronic flash equipment in 1953. He developed special sonar applications to facilitate location of underwater objects and devised pingers to enable underwater cameras to be accurately positioned above the sea floor.

His expertise in the development and use of oceanographic equipment led the National Geographic Society in 1953 to arrange a meeting with French underseas explorer Jacques Cousteau, beginning a friendship and professional collaboration which lasted nearly four decades. HEE's trips aboard Cousteau's research vessel Calypso are described in his correspondence with the National Geographic Society (box 31, folder 6; box 34, folder 13), in articles about HEE in scrapbooks (boxes 126-130) and biographical folders (box 5, folders 1-2), and in autobiographical fragments (box 1, folders 2-9). Travel arrangements and equipment requirements, as well as personal news items, are discussed in HEE's correspondence with Cousteau (box 14, folder 4; box 15, folder 1) and Cousteau's colleagues Georges Houot (box 22, folder 7), Andre Laban (box 25, folder 3), and Jacques Piccard (box 38, folder 2). Anecdotes about "Papa Flash" (the crew's nickname for HEE) are found in letters to HEE (box 3, folder 5) upon the occasion of his official MIT retirement in 1968, filed together under "Calypso." An illustrated diary kept by Edgerton's Calypso shipmate James Dugan on a voyage to Greece in 1953 serves as a log of daily events and captures the spirit of a summer with Cousteau's crew, including anecdotes about HEE (box 4, folder 3, and box 135).

The development and testing of underwater cameras, boomers, flash units, pingers, sonar modifications, and other oceanographic devices for Cousteau and others is described stage by stage in the laboratory notebooks (box 51, folder 1; box 57, folder 5). Additional information is located in the technical specifications and plans files (box 59, folder 6; box 73, folder 10) and in the writings and speeches series (box 105, folder 43; box 114, folder 10).

The trips series (box 90, folder 7; box 104, folder 7) contains much material about HEE's participation in underwater projects. These folders often contain detailed notebooks in which HEE made regular entries including personal information as well as data, diagrams, and hand drawn maps. Some background information about underwater activities is located in the research projects files.

An additional rich source for underwater archaeological, geological, and biological investigations is HEE's correspondence (box 9, folder 2; box 50, folder 5) with his collaborators on projects, including those highlighted in the series descriptions for subject correspondence (page 17 of this finding aid). Researchers interested, for example, in HEE's work hunting for the Loch Ness monster should look first in the Loch Ness, Scotland, trips files and also consult correspondence with Robert Rines.

MIT activities, including Strobe Lab management and teaching responsibilities - Return to MC 25 Home Page

HEE's activities at MIT began with his enrollment as a graduate student in electrical engineering in 1926 and continued until his death in 1990. These activities are reflected in several series in the collection.

HEE's teaching and administrative responsibilities at the Institute, including teaching courses and workshops about stroboscopes (box 83, folder 6; box 84, folder 11), supervising the operations of the Stroboscopic Laboratory (box 85, folder 1; box 87, folder 5), and advising students regarding theses (box 87, folders 10-13), are recorded in Series IV, MIT-Related Materials. His concern for the intellectual development and emotional well-being of his students and former students is amply demonstrated by his correspondence with them in the subjects correspondence (box 9, folder 2; box 50, folder 5) series (the collection also includes a card file of HEE's students, in box 117, identifying the courses they took with him) as well as in anecdotes in published articles about HEE (box 5, folders 1-2) and letters about his career filed as "Birthday greetings, 1968" (box 4, folders 5-9).

HEE's activities in the Stroboscopic Laboratory at MIT are meticulously recorded in his laboratory notebooks (box 50, folder 6 ; box 57, folder 5), which are supplemented by information filed in the technical specifications and plans part of the collection (box 59, folder 6; box 73, folder 10). It was at MIT, in the Strobe Lab or at the swimming pool and other locations, that HEE developed and tested his innovations in photography and in underwater equipment. His elaborate discussions and interactions with colleagues from various fields at MIT, and the ensuing cross- pollination of ideas, are well documented by HEE's laboratory notebook entries.

Photographs of MIT laboratories and personnel, often identified by HEE in handwritten notes, are found throughout the notebooks as well as in albums in the biographical series (boxes 119-125). These pictures provide a visual record over time of changes to labs and lab personnel.

HEE's personal reminiscences about his work at MIT, with emphasis on his early work developing stroboscopic techniques, are recorded in the autobiographical materials in Series I (box 1, folders 2-9).

Business interests, including EG&G, Inc., patents, and reproduction rights - Return to MC 25 Home Page

HEE and Kenneth Germeshausen created an informal business agreement in 1931, whereby they worked together on industrial applications of stroboscopic technology and took equipment to factories to reveal ways of improving efficiency in the operation of machinery. In 1934 they joined with Herbert Grier to form a partnership, incorporated in 1947 as Edgerton, Germeshausen & Grier, Inc. (later EG&G, Inc.) The growth and activities of this corporation, with a particular focus on HEE's personal contributions, are well documented in Series V (box 87, folder 15; box 90, folder 6, and box 143). HEE's early work with Germeshausen is recorded in detail in the laboratory notebooks (box 50, folders 6-8).

HEE filed for a patent on the stroboscope in 1933, and filed for and received many patents thereafter. These business interests are recorded in the patent files in the biographical (box 4, folder 9) as well as the EG&G series (box 90, folders 2-5).

Photographic images produced by HEE using stroboscopic techniques were much in demand by textbook publishers, magazines, advertisers, and others. HEE's attitude toward the marketing of his photographs varied widely, depending upon who wanted to purchase what. His financial arrangements with commercial publishers regarding the sale of reproduction rights for his photographs are documented in correspondence regarding publications (box 114, folder 11; box 115, folder 4). He habitually deposited money received from sale of his images into an account at MIT to defray costs for students enrolled in Strobe Labs (box 85, folder 1; box 86, folder 11). His generosity in granting free reproduction rights to charitable and educational institutions and his distribution of souvenir postcards (containing reproductions of his photographs) to nearly everyone he met is recorded under names of individual correspondents in the subjects correspondence series (box 9, folder 2; box 50, folder 5). Information about reproduction and sale of HEE's images in the late 1970s and 1980s is located in correspondence with Gus Kayafas (box 24, folder 2).

Military work, including nighttime aerial reconnaissance and nuclear weapons testing - Return to MC 25 Home Page

HEE's research for the military began in 1939 when he was asked by the U.S. Army Air Force to design a strobe lamp strong enough to allow nighttime aerial photography of enemy activities on the ground. Development and testing of this equipment, including the D-5 flash unit and other devices, continued until 1944 and included trips by HEE to Ohio, Italy, England, and France. These activities are documented by reports, photographs, blueprints, and correspondence in nighttime aerial surveillance in World War II files (box 77, folder 1 ; box 81, folder 7, and boxes 136-137), as well as in a sound recording made by HEE and others (box 143).

Photography of nuclear weapons testing was undertaken by HEE and his partners, Kenneth Germeshausen and Herbert Grier, in 1947, under contract to the Atomic Energy Commission. The commission thereafter hired them to create timing and firing systems for bomb tests; EG&G, Inc., the corporation they founded, continued to perform such functions for many years. These activities are described in EG&G company history files (box 89, folder 16).

HEE's dealings with the U.S. Navy, regarding bathyscaphe lights, sonar, and other matters, are documented in the subjects correspondence series (box 44, folder 11; box 45, folder 4).



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