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Business of Engineering
Forum Engineering Dynasties: Does a passion for innovation run in your family?
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Engineering Dynasties: Does a passion for innovation run in your family?

jlucas
jlucas over 9 years ago

image

 

Although some of the intellectual giants of science and engineering walked their own path from the start, many others were influenced by significant role models and supporters in their immediate families. Many of these innovators in turn offered support and inspiration to their own children.

 

This week, we'd like to hear from members of the community about their own family connections. Did a relative contribute to your passion for engineering when you were young? Are you passing your knowledge down to your own children? Share your stories in the comments section below...

 

To give you some inspiration, here are three particularly notable engineering 'dynasties', plus an inspiring example from two of our top members.

 

The Stevens family, pioneers in mechanical engineering

John Stevens and his family rank among the most distinguished engineering dynasties in U.S. history, their achievements having played a key role in molding modern mechanical engineering. A colonel in the Revolutionary War, Stevens designed the first American-built steam locomotive in 1825 and was a pioneer in developing the steamboat. His son Robert went on to invent the modern T-rail, used around the world on railroad tracks today and along with his brother, Edwin, built the first commercial railroad in the U.S. Edwin was also heavily involved in the construction of several vessels for the U.S. Navy. Another of John’s sons, John Cox, built and raced the yacht America, which was the first winner of the America’s Cup trophy in 1951. Innovation in the Stevens family has carried on to the next generation, as John’s grandson, Edwin Augustus Stevens, designed a double-ended reversible propeller-driven ferryboat based on an idea by his grandfather.

 

The Curie family, a Nobel Prize winning dynasty

The Curies have the distinction of being the family that has been most decorated by the Nobel Prize Foundation, predominantly in the fields of chemistry and physics - paving the way for many core disciplines in engineering today.  Marie Curie, a Polish physicist, chemist and engineer, was a pioneer in research on radioactivity. For her research, she was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, which she shared with her husband, Pierre in 1903. She received her second prize from the foundation in 1911. Her daughter, Irene, was also the recipient of a Nobel Prize for her discovery of artificial radioactivity in 1935. The legacy continued down the Curie family line, as both of Irene’s children are esteemed scientists.

 

The Cain family, representing nine decades of electrical engineering

Eugene Cain received his electrical engineering degree from the University of Delaware in 1932, during the Great Depression. Thirty years later, his son, Donald graduated from the same university and ultimately passed the legacy onto his son, who earned a master’s degree in 1997. While all three Cain men studied electrical engineering, their career paths are clear examples of how diverse job opportunities are in the field. John worked as a stevedore while playing for a semi-pro baseball team sponsored by his company, which saved him from the ranks of those unemployed during the Great Depression. Donald worked in the power industry, where he made a career out of designing lines and hooking up customers. The youngest Cain, Bradley, moved in yet another direction from his father and grandfather and works for several startups designing Internet data center products.

 

Dale and Chrystal Winhold - element14's father-daughter maker team

 

The element14 Community boasts its own cross-generational maker team in the form of Dale and Chrystal Winhold of Alberta USA. Longtime member dwinhold has collaborated with his daughter chrystalw on a number of exciting projects for the community, including contributing to a number of our design challenges. In November 2015 our Top Members nominated the duo as our 'Members of the Month' in recognition of their hard work and creativity.

 

Do you have a family story to rival these featured engineering dynasties? Tell us about your relative connections in the comments section below.

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Top Replies

  • DAB
    DAB over 9 years ago +2
    My father only had an 8th grade education, but it was his inquisitiveness and interest in things that helped me become a very good engineer. So while I see where having a technical theme among family members…
  • DAB
    0 DAB over 9 years ago

    My father only had an 8th grade education, but it was his inquisitiveness and interest in things that helped me become a very good engineer.

     

    So while I see where having a technical theme among family members, I still think it comes down to the individual to have the right skills and desire to enter science or engineering disciplines.

     

    DAB

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  • scitechindian
    0 scitechindian over 9 years ago in reply to DAB

    awesome

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 9 years ago

    My family usually works in education, medicine and law and architecture.  Before the war my grandfather built mechanical tide predictors and mechanical Fourier analyzers for the Navy.  Later, he designed the insulation system on a submarine that was instrumental in slaying the German wolfpack.  Sadly he later died from mesothelioma from the asbestos he was exposed to supervising production.  If one googles 'Oneita Watland Walker,' he might find pictures of grandpa Fritz's wife christening an LST ship, no one died on that boat.  My family was never greatly admiring of the leadership in the US, but they were deeply hating of Uncle Adolph.  Before the war my Uncle raced oval track motorcycle at Soldier Field, maintaining and modifying his own equipment. During the war he inspected recently captured bridges to see if they needed to be destroyed, could be used, or needed work.  He was a paratrooper who participated in all of the 82nd's drops in Europe.

     

    There is a dimensionless number that has something  to do with fluidics or friction or something that is called Hersey:  https://books.google.com/books?id=s_sTzyB2QmYC&pg=PA17&lpg=PA17&dq=Hersey+dimensionless+number&source=bl&ots=vAihlqgVpz&…

     

    My son is currently writing the control code for Warren Buffet's world's largest windfarm which is situated in Nebraska.

     

    My paternal grandfather was an infantry commander during WW1, which is, I suppose, a kind of engineering.  Another uncle was a crew chief in Korea, maintaining one of the USs first jet fighters.

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  • doctorwho8
    0 doctorwho8 over 8 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    And all of the US are thankful for your family's services during those years.

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 8 years ago

    I should mention that my Uncle George sleeps in France, having been wounded in Belgium.  I think that global warming is a challenge akin to war because it also represents an existential  threat to our civilization.  Once my son Nathan was working on a wind tower in another job and dropped his wrench.  It hit the battery bank and vaporized.  His face was plated in tool-steel!  Fortunately he was wearing his safety goggles as we had trained him that if he thinks maybe he should be wearing protection he must find and don it immediately.  Only way to Niflheim is through death in offensive action.

     

    My lessons here are two.  Always wear your respirator and face protection or steel-toed boots or chaps, et c. when remotely appropriate.

     

    Also, be judicious about fossil-fuel use.  I have a Toyota Yaris and a Dodge 1500.  I only use the pickup when hauling stuff.  If I am going to a party I make phone calls to see if someone else needs a ride.  In my house, currently, we are both coders who can work at home, so we do, usually.  If you are going to run errands, think about how to consolidate them, can I get this tomorrow by UPS and work on something else today?

     

    The fighters in my family were serene men; they invested in and built for and hoped for peace, They just didn't anticipate it, necessarily.

     

    They hated the Vietnam war because they couldn't see how Uncle Ho was a credible threat to our nation.  If some one were to claim that war was always good-for-nothing, they would counter-claim that it did end slavery in North America, and that the allies, especially the Russians, attrited the National Socialists into evanescence and that this was ultimately, a good thing.

     

    Pardon my prolixity and jump-cutting.  This remains a fraught topic for me

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