- Holbrook Mann MacNeille
Holbrook Mann MacNeille (
May 11 ,1907 –September 30 ,1973 ) was an Americanmathematician who worked for theUnited States Atomic Energy Commission before becoming the first Executive Director of theAmerican Mathematical Society .Personal life
MacNeille was born
May 11 ,1907 inNew York City and was raised inSummit, New Jersey , the first of two brothers. His father wasPerry Robinson MacNeille , an architect and urban planner and his motherClausine Mann MacNeille who was active on the Summit Board of Education. His aunt was the Jungian analystKristine Mann .MacNeille went to the Summit Public Schools and summered in Bailey Island,
Maine . At Bailey Island he became acquainted withFrank Aydelotte who encouraged him to go toSwarthmore College from which he graduated with highest honors in 1928. Following in Aydelotte's footsteps he was aRhodes Scholar atBalliol College ,Oxford ,England 1928–1930 receiving a B.A. in 1930 and an M.A. in 1947. He received a Ph.D. in Mathematics fromHarvard University in 1935 where he was the first student ofMarshall Harvey Stone , was a Sterling Fellow atYale University inNew Haven, Connecticut 1935–1936 and aBenjamin Peirce Instructor at Harvard between 1936–1938. During the summers he was also a partner in the Dave Richardson Laboratories in Bailey Island, Maine, which produceddogfish prepared fordissection at school laboratories.MacNeille's Ph.D work resulted in the
MacNeille completion theorem [http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/NormalCompletion.html] ("seeDedekind cut "), a generalization ofRichard Dedekind 's construction of real numbers from the ordered set of rationals.Upon completing his studies, he taught mathematics at
Kenyon College inGambier, Ohio as an associate professor (1938–1941), full professor (1941–1947) and chairman of the department (1945–1947).World War II
During several of the years at
Kenyon College he was on leave as Scientific Liaison Officer (1944–1945) and Head of Mission (1945–1946)London Mission of theOffice of Scientific Research and Development , American Embassy inLondon , England. During (1946–1948) he was Scientific Director of the London Branch Office of the U.S.Office of Naval Research and then during (1948–1949) spent more than a year as chief of the fundamental research branch of the Atomic Energy Commission inWashington, D.C . In 1948 he received the President'sCertificate of Merit from PresidentHarry S. Truman .After World War II
In November 1949 he became executive director of the
American Mathematical Society where he served until 1954. From 1954-1961 he was professor and chairman of the Department of Mathematics atWashington University inSt. Louis, Missouri , and then from 1961 professor and chairman of the Department of Mathematics atCase Western Reserve University in Cleveland,Ohio until his death.During this latter period he became interested in teaching, and directed several educational movies as part of the Calculus Film Project of the Educational Media Committee of the
Mathematical Association of America .Filmography
*"Area under a curve"
*"The definiteintegral "
*"Volume of a solid of revolution"
*"Infinite acres"
*"Volume of a solid of a revolution"
*"Volume by shells"
*"Theorem of the Mean Policeman"Awards and other positions
*
Rhodes Scholarship (1928) (Swarthmore College , Balliol)
*Sterling Research Fellowship ,Yale University (1936-1936)
*Benjamin Pierce Instructor in Mathematics ,Harvard University (1936-1938)
*President's Certificate of Merit , PresidentHarry S. Truman (1948)
*Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics council (1961-1964)
* Fellow of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science council (1964)
* Chairman of theMathematics Association of America committee on Educational Media (1962-1963)
*Phi Beta Kappa
* Associate editorSigma Xi Mathematics Magazine (1962-1963)Publications
*H. M. MacNeille, "Extensions of Partially Ordered Sets",
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science , Vol. 22, 1936
*H. M. MacNeille, "Partially Ordered Sets", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, Vol. 42, No. 3 (Nov., 1937) , pp. 416-460
*H. M. MacNeille, "Extensions of Measure", Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Vol 24, 1938
*H. M. MacNeille, "Extensions of Measure", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 24, No. 4 (Apr. 15, 1938) , pp. 188-193
*H. M. MacNeille, "Lattices and Boolean Rings", Bull. AMS, 1939
*H. M. MacNeille, "Extension of a distributive lattice to a Boolean ring", Bull. Amer. Math. Soc, 1939
*H. M. MacNeille, "A Unified Theory of Integration", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 27, 1941References
*P.T. Johnstone, "Stone Spaces", Cambridge University Press, (August 14, 1986), ISBN 0-521-33779-8
*Everett Pitcher, "A History of the Second Fifty Years,American Mathematical Society 1939-1988",American Mathematical Society , 1997, (Page 251), ISBN 0-8218-0125-2
*"Who was who in America", Marquis Who's Who, Volume VI, 1974-1976 (Chicago, 1976), ISBN 0-8379-0207-X
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