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Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectureship Records

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Held at: Princeton University Library: University Archives [Contact Us]

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Princeton University Library: University Archives. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

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Princeton University. School of Engineering and Applied Science

Despite Princeton University's historical reputation as a bastion of liberal arts education, the Princeton University School of Engineering and Applied Science is one of the oldest and most highly recognized institutions of its kind in the United States. Since its inception in 1921, the School of Engineering has been guided by an academic ethos which situates the typically specialized engineering field comfortably within the greater schemes of well-rounded undergraduate education and public service, Princeton's traditional hallmarks. Today the School of Engineering and Applied Science oversees six departments as well as an even larger number of interdisciplinary programs and affiliated research centers, and offers degrees on both the undergraduate and the graduate level.

The teaching and study of engineering at Princeton dates back to the late 19th century with the founding of the Department of Civil Engineering in 1875 by Professor Charles McMillan. Predating the eventual formation of the School of Engineering by nearly 50 years, the Department of Civil Engineering with its modest faculty of three professors produced a remarkable group of young men who energetically went forth into the engineering fields. The most notable feature of the early Department of Civil Engineering was the incorporation of liberal arts electives into the undergraduate curriculum. At a time when the primary emphasis in engineering education was upon rote memorization of classic engineering principles, the Princeton method offered a broader sense of the science's potential to aid society at large.

While the Department of Civil Engineering set a standard early on for undergraduate engineering education at Princeton, the fledgling Department of Electrical Engineering demonstrated how original research on the graduate level could advance the bank of knowledge in an entire field. Originated in 1889 by Professor of Physics Cyrus Fogg Brackett (a friend and colleague of Thomas Edison), Princeton's two-year graduate program in electrical engineering was the first of its kind in the United States.

With engineering still a small but rapidly growing field, both professionally and academically, it is hardly surprising that Princeton alumni from each of these programs came to form working relationships in the field, and grew to collectively recognize the value of their respective educations. From this recognition arose in 1912 the Princeton Engineering Association, a dedicated alumni group in support of the Department(s) of Engineering. As the number of engineering graduates increased and the vocalizations of those alumni and faculty who considered the expansion of the University's engineering programs to be of the utmost importance grew louder, it became apparent that a new academic body within the University was necessary. The start of World War I also brought a heightened awareness of the importance of engineering to the future of the world at large. At this time as it would later in the century, American military conflict played an integral role in shaping the development of the engineering field.

In 1921 representatives from the Princeton Engineering Association convened to formulate a plan for a School of Engineering at Princeton. The eventual outline submitted to the trustees called for freshman and sophomore years dedicated to the learning of engineering fundamentals. In these years all students would take nearly the same courses. The junior and senior years would allow the student to choose a specialized form of engineering from those offered by the school, and fill out their remaining courses with electives. Four years of study would result in the degree of Bachelor of Science in Engineering, and one or more years of additional study would lead to a technical degree in Civil, Electrical, Mechanical, Mining, or Chemical Engineering.

On the recommendation of the Engineering Association, the trustees secured the services of Arthur M. Greene, Jr. as the inaugural dean of the School of Engineering. In his impressive career, the 40-year-old Greene had served on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania, the Drexel Institute of Technology, the University of Missouri, and most recently the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. His contributions at these institutions extended beyond the classroom however, as he wrote numerous textbooks and designed the campus power plants at Missouri and Drexel.

In addition to taking on the role of the school's first dean, Greene occupied another position, that of the chairman of the newly formed Department of Mechanical Engineering. The formation of the School of Engineering according to the proposed plan called for the creation of three new departments, Mechanical Engineering, Mining Engineering (soon to be changed to Geological), and Chemical Engineering. Each of these departments would require a faculty, laboratory and research facilities, and a curriculum. The early Department of Mechanical Engineering, which had Greene as its chairman and sole faculty member, is exemplary of the challenges facing these fledgling engineering departments. With only 84 students in its initial year, it was no surprise that the school developed somewhat slowly at first.

Despite these challenges, the singular momentum of Greene planted a seed within each of the five engineering departments that would bloom over the next twenty years into a dynamic network of students, faculty, and alumni engaged in cutting edge engineering research and experimentation. Underscoring all of this was Greene's educational vision which he termed "Engineering Plus." In a 1926 statement, Greene set forth that "the purpose accordingly of the Princeton School of Engineering is to develop engineers of dependability, resourcefulness, vision; men who will perceive the larger aspects of the projects they undertake, who in addition to controlling the merely technical engineering factors will, because of their education in the humanistic atmosphere of a university primarily devoted to the liberal arts and sciences, also comprehend and mold intelligently the human, social, and economic elements encountered in these projects."

Previously scattered about campus in whatever facilities were available for use, the School of Engineering was finally organized under a single roof for the first time in 1928 with the construction of Green Hall, and two significant developments over the next decade would leave Dean Greene's permanent mark on the School of Engineering and the University prior to his retirement in 1940. The first of these was the formation of advisory committees for each of the engineering departments in 1935. Comprised of practicing engineers drawn from Princeton alumni, these committees served a dual purpose. The first was to obtain input from men attuned to the type of work being done in the field, so as to keep the Engineering School's curriculum as relevant as possible. The second underlying purpose of the advisory committees was to develop relationships among engineering professionals, faculty, and students. So successful was this experiment that it was eventually adopted on a University-wide basis in 1941.

From the recommendation of the advisory committees emerged the second major development at the School of Engineering in the 1930s, the Basic Engineering program. The program offered an even broader range of courses than any of the standard engineering programs, and left the student ably equipped for additional graduate study, particularly in business and administration.

The Second World War and the post-War period marked a time of rapid growth and change for the School of Engineering. During the war, the government dedicated enormous levels of funding to engineering research in hopes of maintaining a technological edge over the Axis, with much of this money flowing to institutions such as Princeton who were at the forefront of the field. Despite great advances, wartime growth in the engineering was also hampered by a concurrent decrease in enrollment and wartime restrictions on many of the materials integral to experimentation and research.

In 1942 Associate Administrator of the Civil Aeronautics Board undertook a study of Princeton's Engineering Program at the behest of Greene's successor, Dean Kenneth H. Condit. The result was the formation of the Department of Aeronautical Engineering in the fall of that year, of which Daniel Sayre soon found himself the sole faculty member and administrator. The department's early growth was facilitated by funding from the armed forces, specifically the Navy which was eager to fuel research in applied aeronautical engineering and jet propulsion.

Following the war, Ph.D. programs were instituted in each of the departments and enrollment in the School of Engineering mushroomed to over 500 students, placing a severe strain on the facilities in Green Hall. Some relief was offered in the form of the Forrestal Campus which provided laboratory space for the Department of Aeronautical Engineering; however, other departments suffered due to the cramped conditions and makeshift accommodations. A 1949 story in the Princeton Alumni Weekly that featured informative segments on each engineering department rang with a common theme: the need for a new and expanded School of Engineering building. The canvassing of the Engineering Association resulted in a temporary solution to a ceaseless problem, the addition of a wing to Green Hall for the use of the Mechanical Engineering Department. Nonetheless as Dean Condit retired in 1954, the incredible growth of the school's faculty and research interests was held back by its physical limitations.

Condit's successor was Joseph Clifton Elgin, who had been an integral player in the early formation of the School of Engineering as well as the Department of Chemical Engineering's first professor and chairman. Elgin, though an old hand on the faculty, made the revision of the engineering curriculum a top priority early on in his deanship. While maintaining the general focus of the "Engineering Plus" concept, Elgin adopted a new approach to the study of engineering, focusing on basic principles. The school's experience during World War II had shown that engineering as a field was so vibrant and full of momentum that to teach a student any one specific technology or set of skills was futile. Rather, graduates would be better served by a firm understanding of the scientific basis for these skills and technologies, and henceforth would be able to adapt readily once in the field. The new program soon earned a reputation for turning out highly capable engineers, and the recognition resulted in a 1962 award of one million dollars from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

While the momentous million dollar grant was not a sum large enough to underwrite a new engineering building, the notable gift was supplemented by funds previously raised during the $53 Million Campaign of the late 1950s. With the necessary $8 million allocated for the purpose, construction began almost immediately and in 1962 the School of Engineering moved into the new Engineering Quadrangle on Olden Street, a facility almost four times the size of Green Hall.

The large-scale move of the school brought about several shifts in organization and nomenclature, most notably the change of the school's name to the School of Engineering and Applied Science, to better reflect Elgin's curriculum. Aeronautical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering also merged at this time to form the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Sciences, and the Geological Engineering Department was demoted to the program level and absorbed into the Department of Civil Engineering. The decade of the 1960s also witnessed the creation of several interdepartmental programs, sometimes invoking the cooperation of departments outside the School of Engineering. Just one such example was the Transportation Engineering program, undertaken in conjunction with the Department of Economics and the School of Architecture and Urban Planning.

During the deanship of Joseph C. Elgin, which stretched from 1954-1971, the School of Engineering responded ably to changes both within the University and in the engineering field. Nuclear energy and solid state science emerged in the engineering lexicon. Perhaps more so than any other department, Electrical Engineering witnessed great advances in its scientific domain in the form of early computing and digitization. The introduction of new courses in 1957 and the acquisition of an IBM machine that same year resulted in the University's first computer center, administered through the School of Engineering.

Robert G. Jahn, the fourth Dean of the School of Engineering, was among the candidates awarded doctoral degrees during Elgin's first year in the position. Returning as Dean in 1971, Jahn presided over a school which was gaining a growing reputation as a leader in research, despite a high attrition rate of undergraduates who felt uncertain of their future as engineers in society. Jahn attempted to relate his vision of a future for engineering education that would tie the sciences to critical problems in society. Said the Dean in a 1971 interview, "We shall not attempt to train a man for a trade. Our goal is to give him the confidence, born of a certain amount of experience, to approach any technical problem in a constructive, analytical way; to show him how to assemble his resources, to organize his thinking, to consider the human implications of what he is doing, and to come to grips with new situations." Balancing this broad scope with the rush of specialized technology proved difficult. The school saw the creation of the Department of Computer Science, a new department formed out of what had previously been a program under Electrical Engineering. Other new research initiatives such as the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research Laboratory (PEAR Lab) sought to connect the engineering sciences to the greater needs of society at large.

The two decades after Jahn's retirement in 1986 were a time of change for the School of Engineering in terms of administration and curriculum. During the deanships of Hisashi Kobayashi (1986-1991) and James Wei (1991-2001), shifting focuses placed a new emphasis upon the business aspects of the engineering profession, and the need for the modern engineer to grapple alternately with the tangible realities of materials and substances as well as the more abstract realms of statistics and mathematics. The most significant sign of this was the formation of the Department of Operations Research and Financial Engineering in 1999. The Department, the first of its kind in the nation, proved popular with students and plans for a dedicated building to house it were enacted in 2006.

As the School of Engineering and Applied Science moved forward into the 21st century it did so with a renewed sense of purpose and a new awareness of engineering's place in the world. Particularly notable was the appointment of the school's first female dean, Maria Klawe, who served from 2003-2006. New special programs and centers focused upon robotics, engineering education, and biology demonstrated a forward-thinking mindset with an emphasis on humanism, carrying on the legacy of engineering as an extension of the liberal arts so integral to Dean Greene's "Engineering Plus" concept nearly a century ago.

The Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectureship in Applied Engineering and Technology was established in 1921 in memory of Professor Cyrus Fogg Brackett (1833-1915). A teacher, physician, inventor, and physicist, Brackett was a pioneer in the field of electrical engineering. The lectures were free to the public, although intended for engineering students, and occurred monthly while classes were in session. The Dean of the School of Engineering, in conjunction with a committee established by the Princeton Engineering Association, selected and invited the speakers. The lecturers were often business or research executives in engineering-related fields, but other well-regarded scientists, businessmen, and statesmen lectured on occasion. Lecture topics included, for example, "Street Railway Engineering," 1924; "The Story of Flour," 1934; "A Public Utility Investment in South America," 1935; "Research in Connection with Higher Speed Steam Locomotives," 1940; and "Postwar Industrial Relations," 1947.

It became somewhat of an honor to give a Brackett lecture. Many of the businessmen went to great expense to publish their lectures. On the tenth anniversary of the first Brackett address, former lecturers organized the Guild of Brackett Lecturers and thereafter met periodically to hear new lectures and enjoy formal dinners. The number of lectures declined during the Second World War, however, and the last took place in 1953.

The lecturer files contain correspondence, lecture manuscripts, and published lectures–although rarely all three. The other materials include lecture schedules, a biography of Professor Brackett, lists and directories of the lecturers, a scrapbook of clippings, and histories of the lectureship.

The bulk of the collection is composed of files pertaining to each lecturer or potential lecturer, arranged alphabetically by name and including, if known, the month and year of the lecture. Files of a general nature are placed at the beginning; oversized items are placed at the end.

Compiled by the office of the Dean of the School of Engineering and, in May 1962, transferred to the University Archives. Additional transfer of material previously housed at Firestone Library in 2008 [AR.2008.153].

For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.

This collection was processed by Matthew Reeder in December 2002. Finding aid written by Matthew Reeder in December 2002.

No appraisal information is available.

Publisher
University Archives
Finding Aid Author
Matthew Reeder
Finding Aid Date
2002
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research use.

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Collection Inventory

Fogg, Cyrus Brackett, 1921-1934. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Deceased Lecturers, undated. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Guild of Brackett Lecturers, 1931 December-1941. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

History, 1928 November-1931 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lecture Record Book, 1921 December-1953 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lecture by Unknown Author, 1927 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lecturer Directory and Lists, circa 1923-1951. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Schedules, circa 1922 June-1940 September. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Aitchison, Clyde B. (March 1929), 1929 March-May. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Ammann, O. H. (March 1934), 1934 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Aylesworth, M. H. (January 1928), 1927 December-1936 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Barnard, Chester I. (March 1936), 1936. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Bell, James F. (May 1934), 1934 May. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Brown, G. S. (1924), 1924. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Buckwalter, T. V. (January 1940), 1940 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Byles, Axtel J. (December 1937), 1937-1938. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Calder, Curtis Ernest (1935), 1935 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Case, Montgomery B. (October 1931), 1931 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Chandler, Charles Lyon (1932), 1932. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Codd, L. A, 1937 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Colbert, Leo Otis (November 1947), 1947 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Condit, Kenneth Hamilton (October 1940), 1940 October-1952. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Cooper, Hugh L, 1923 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Cortelyou, George B. (January 1933), 1933. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

DeGolyer, Everette Lee (December 1939), 1940. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Dickerman, William C. (April 1931), 1931. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Dorr, John Van Nostrand (February 1935), 1935 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

DuBois, Gaston, 1937 September. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Emmons, Charles DeMoss (January 1924), 1924 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Farrell, James A. (October 1932), 1932 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Fineshriber, W. H, 1932 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Fox, Harold K. (March 1927), 1926 April-1927 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Francis, Clarence (March 1937), 1937. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Frothingham, Francis E. (November 1927), 1927 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Funk, N. E. (February 1940), 1940 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Gary (Judge), 1923 May. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Goodrich, Caspar F. (1923), 1923. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Gormley, M. J. (January 1931), 1930 June-1933 September. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Grace, Eugene, 1932 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Grant, Ulysses S., III, undated. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Gray, Carl Raymond (April 1935), 1933 March-1935 July. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Greene, Arthur M., Jr. (October 1933), 1933 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Grunsky, C. E. (1932 January), 1931 December-1932 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Ham, William H. (January 1936), 1936 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Harbord, J. G. (November 1935), 1935 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Harriman, Henry Ingraham (December 1922), 1923 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Hart, W. E. (March 1924), 1924 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Hayes, J. E, 1933 October-November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Haynes, Williams (December 1935), 1936. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Hirshfeld, C. F. (November 1936), 1936 November-1938. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Hopkinson, Ernest (April 1924), 1924 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Hormel, Jay C. (January 1947), 1947 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Horn, C. W. (December 1934), 1932 December-1934 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Hutchinson, B. E. (December 1932), 1932 November-December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Hogg, Thomas H. (December 1941), 1941. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Insull, Samuel (December 1921), 1921 December-1931 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Jewett, Frank B. (May 1928), 1928 March-May. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Johnsen, Bjarne (May 1924), 1923 November-1936 July. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Jolliffe, C. B. (April 1951), 1951 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Jollyman, J. P. (April 1926), 1924 October-1926 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Jones, Jonathan (April 1933), 1932 April-1933 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Kilpatrick, James L. (March 1931), 1931 February-March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Kimball, Dexter S. (November 1928), 1928 October-1939 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Kinnard, L. H. (October 1927), 1927 March-November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Klein, Julius (April 1930), 1928 October-1930 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Langmuir, Irving (March 1923), 1922 January-1923 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lauer, Conrad Newton (December 1923), 1923 November-1940 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lee, Elisha (May 1925), 1925 February-May. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lee, William S. (October 1923), 1923 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lewis, Harold M. (February 1932), 1929 August-1932 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Little, Arthur D. (December 1924), 1923 December-1926 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Loebell, Henry O. (January 1923), 1922 December-1923 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Loree, Leonor Fresnel (January 1927), 1925 April-1934 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Lyman, Alexander (February 1923), 1922 October-1923 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

McCall, Joseph B. (January 1922), 1922 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

McCarter, Thomas N. (January 1924), 1923 December-1935 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

McGraw, James H. (May 1929), 1926 November-1940 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Mathey, Dean (November 1931), 1929 September-1931 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Merck, George W. (December 1940), 1940 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Merrill, Oscar Charles (April 1929), 1928 January-1933 June. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Merriman, Thaddeus (May 1926), 1925 May-1939 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Meserve, Harry C. (November 1923), 1923 October-1925 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Meyer, Henry C., Jr. (April 1936), 1935 January-1936 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Moody, L. F. (1925), 1925. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Mooney, James D. (January 1939), 1938 May-1939 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Palmer, Dwight R. G. (December 1949), 1949 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Palmer, Lew Russell (November 1938), 1937 October-1939 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Perin, Charles Page (February 1924), 1923 November-1931 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Pew, J. Howard (April 1938), 1937 October-1938 July. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Prentiss, H. W., Jr. (November 1942), 1942 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Proctor, Carlton S. (December 1936), 1936 September-December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Pupin, Michael I. (January 1926), 1925 June-December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Ramsburg, C. J. (February 1938), 1936 August-1938 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Rea, Samuel (March 1926), 1925 October-1926 May. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Sargent, Fred W. (November 1929), 1928 August-1929 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Sauveur, Albert, 1938 January-1939 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Shibley, Fred W. (1930 May), 1929 February-1930 June. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Shoup, Paul (January 1930), 1928 January-1931 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Sillcox, L. K. (November 1939), 1939 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Sinclair, Earle W. (March 1932), 1930 October-1932 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Sloan, M. S. (November 1928), 1927 March-1928 November. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Sperry, Elmer A. (May 1927), 1926 June-1927 December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Stettinius, Edward R., Jr, 1937 December-1938 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Stillwell, Lewis B, circa 1932 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Stine, Charles M. A. (April 1934), 1933 May-1934 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Strauss, Jesse I. (March 1930), 1928 November-1930 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Taylor, Harden F. (December 1929), 1929 November-1932 September. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Thompson, Henry B. (November 1924), 1924 October. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Thornton, Henry W. (December 1930), 1929 October-1931 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Truesdale, W. H. (February 1926), 1924 February-1926 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Vincent, George E. (March 1933), 1932 February-1933 March. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Voorhees, Stephen F. (February 1931), 1929 January-1931 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Wadhams, Albion J. (February 1934), 1932 December-1934 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Wallis, James T. (May 1928), 1926 June-1928 May. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Wardenburg, F. A. (January 1935), 1934 November-1935 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Warner, Edward P. (March 1928), 1927 August-1932 June. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Warriner, Samuel D. (April 1927), 1925 October-1927 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Watson, Thomas J. (October 1928), 1928 June-December. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Materials Viewable Online
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Weidlein, Edward Ray (April 1937), 1936 August-1937 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Wherrett, H. S. (March 1939), 1936 August-1939 April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Wilson, Robert E. (February 1936), 1934 December-1936 February. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Wolman, Leo (April 1940), 1940 February-April. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Brackett Lecturer Certificates, undated. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Brackett Lecture Scrapbook, 1921 October-1932 January. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

The Development of American Street Railways, an Address Delivered by Charles D. Emmons before the School of Engineering, 1924 January 8. 1 box.
Physical Description

1 box

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