- Walter Lincoln Hawkins
Walter Lincoln Hawkins (
March 21 ,1911 –August 20 ,1992 ) was a black scientist/inventor who, while working at Bell Laboratories in the 1940s, helped to make universaltelephone service possible. Hawkins developed a plastic to insulate telephone wires — a new material that was lightweight, durable, and less expensive than thelead sheathing used at the time.Early years
Hawkins was born on
March 21 ,1911 , inWashington, D.C. His father was a lawyer for the U.S. Census Bureau and his mother was a science teacher in the District of Columbia school system.From childhood, Hawkins was fascinated with how things worked. For example, it was not unusual for him to take apart one toy and reassemble it to make another one. He also made spring-driven toy boats to sail in the reflecting pool in front of the
Lincoln Memorial . Hawkins and a fellow eleven-year-old once tried to build a perpetual motion machine, not realizing that it was an impossible task. He built a working radio so he could listen to Washington Senators baseball games.While at Washington's Dunbar High School, Hawkins noticed that his physics teacher drove an expensive new car every year. The teacher, who had invented a self-starter mechanism to replace automobile hand cranks, received a new car each year as partial payment from the company which had bought the mechanism. Hawkins was tremendously excited to discover that a person could make a living through mechanical tinkering.
Education
After graduating from high school Hawkins became one of two African-Americans enrolled at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute , a well-known engineering school inTroy, New York . In 1932 he graduated with a chemical engineering degree. Unable to find a job during theGreat Depression , he enrolled in graduate school atHoward University and, in 1934, earned aMaster's degree in chemistry.Professor
Howard Blatt , Hawkins’ friend and mentor at Howard, informed him of a special scholarship atMcGill University inMontreal, Canada . Hawkins enrolled at McGill, earned hisDoctorate in Chemistry in 1939, and left to continue his research atColumbia University when he received a fellowship from theNational Research Council .Bell Laboratories
In 1942, Hawkins became the first African-American to join the technical staff of
Bell Laboratories . By controlling much of thePacific theater inWorld War II , the Japanese had cut off much of America’s rubber supply from Southeast Asia. Hawkins contributed to the development of a rubber substitute made frompetroleum raw materials.After the war, Hawkins began work on an important project, a new and improved insulation for telephone cables. Underground and underwater cables, which were laid over incredibly long distances, were covered with fiber wrapped in heavy, expensive lead sheathing. Scientists had known that new, lightweight plastics would be a good alternative, but common plastics did not last long outdoors. Hawkins and
Vincent Lanza invented a plastic coating that could withstand extreme fluctuations in temperature, last up to seventy years, and was less expensive than lead. Telephone lines were subsequently installed in rural areas, bringing affordable phone service to thousands of people.Hawkins, who worked at Bell Labs for thirty-four years, became assistant director of their chemical research lab in 1974. His work with
polymers , primarily plastics, focused on the development of new products andrecycling . The extremely durable nature of plastic becomes a huge problem when it must be discarded. Hawkins became an expert, not only in making plastics last longer, but in recycling these seemingly indestructible products.Retirement years
Upon his retirement from Bell Labs in 1976, Hawkins began teaching and encouraging college students to study science and engineering. In 1981, he became the first chairman of
Project SEED (Support of the Educationally & Economically Disadvantaged), anAmerican Chemical Society program designed to promote science careers for minority students. He also helped to set up a program at Bell Labs andAT&T to recruit African-American scientists and engineers.Honors
Hawkins was frequently honored as a polymer chemistry pioneer. The first African-American to become a member of the
National Academy of Engineering , Hawkins also won theInternational Medal of the Society of Plastics . In a 1992White House ceremony, he received theNational Medal of Technology from PresidentGeorge H. Bush .Death
Hawkins died in
San Marcos, California onAugust 20 ,1992 .References
Kessler, James H., J.S. Kidd, Renee A. Kidd, and Katherine A. Morin. "Distinguished African-American Scientists of the 20th Century." Oryx Press: Phoenix, AZ, 1996.
McMurray, Emily, ed. "Notable Twentieth-Century Scientists." Gale Research, Inc.: Detroit, 1995.
Sammons, Vivian Ovelton. "Blacks in Science & Medicine." Hemisphere Publishing Corporation, New York, 1990.
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