- Preston Bassett
Preston Rogers Bassett (
March 20 ,1892 –April 30 ,1992 ) was an inventor, engineer, and pioneer in instruments for aviation.Biography
Preston Rogers Bassett was born in
Buffalo, New York , son of urban planner Edward Murray Bassett and Annie Preston Bassett. GeologistIsabel Bassett Wasson was his sister. He received an A.B. fromAmherst College in 1913 and attended thePolytechnic Institute of Brooklyn in 1913-1914. He received two honorary degrees, an M.A. and a D.Sc., from Amherst College, and an honorary LLD fromAdelphi College . He married Jeanne Reed Mordorf in 1919 and had four children.Career at Sperry
Bassett worked for the
Sperry Gyroscope Company for his whole career, where he rose from research engineer (1914) to Chief Engineer (1929), Vice-President in Charge of Engineering (1932), General Manager (1944), and President (1945-1956). He was also Vice President of the mergedSperry Corporation (1950-1957). He held 35 patents awarded between 1920 and 1937, including several for improved high-intensity carbon arc lights used in anti-aircraftsearchlights andmovie projectors . He helpedAlbert Michelson use arc light and gyroscope technology to measure the speed of light at Mount Wilson in June, 1924. He also developed the first soundproofing systems for airplanes and worked closely with Sperry founderElmer Ambrose Sperry on several flight instruments based on gyroscopes, especially thegyrocompass , crucial to flying safely at night and in bad weather. The first blind landing (now called an instrument landing) was made by aviation pioneerJimmy Doolittle in 1929 using Sperry instruments.Later life and work
Bassett's many interests in addition to aviation included
antique collecting, early technology, and history ofLong Island andNew England . He was President of theInstitute of Aeronautical Sciences (1947), Nassau Historical Society (1947-1954), Friends ofOld Bethpage Village (1966-1970), andKeeler Tavern Preservation Society inRidgefield, Connecticut (1968-1972). He served as Vice President of the Society for the Preservation of Long Island Antiquities (1962-1972) andNew York State Historical Association inCooperstown, New York (1964-1975). He served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn (1952-1961). He was a director of Abilities, Inc., a company that employed the handicapped. He was a fellow of theAmerican Physical Society ,American Association for the Advancement of Science ,American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics , and Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. He was a member of theNational Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) from 1954-1958, when it became the presentNational Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). He was a keen observer of atmospheric phenomena encouraging others to look skyward to see the optical effects of clouds, raindrops, and ice crystals. He painted still lifes and landscapes. He wrote books and articles on topics ranging from Long Island Craftsmen to Shadow Bands and Searchlights. His lectures to local groups on these topics were very popular. In his eighties and nineties he embarked on an “uncollecting” program in which he gave antiques to theSmithsonian Institution ,Henry Ford Museum , Mead Art Museum, Old Bethpage Village,Farmers' Museum , Keeler Tavern, and others, always encouraging the museums to put his antiques into historical context. He died onApril 30 ,1992 at the age of 100. [cite web|title = History of the Bassett Planetarium|publisher = Amherst College|url = http://www.amherst.edu/~bassett/history.html|accessdate = 2008-05-09]References
*Bassett, Preston R. "Life and Times of Preston R. Bassett." (privately published, April, 1976)
*"The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography" (New York, J. T. White: 1892-)
* [http://www.fathom.com/course/10701016/ Early Contributions to Aviation Online Course, including (in Session 3) Bassett's role in blind flying and searchlights]
* [http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/PTO/search-bool.html US Patent search page, search for Preston and Bassett in Inventor name, 1790-present]Further reading
*Jessup, Peter. "Interview with Preston R. Bassett on Motion Pictures and Blind Flying" (24 pp, Columbia University: Oral History Project, July 1980)
*Jaffe, Bernard "Michelson and the Speed of Light, Biography of a Scientist" (197 pp, Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1960)
*Bassett, Preston R with Margaret F. Bartlett; illustrated by Jim Arnosky. "Raindrop stories." (40 pp., New York: Four Winds Press, 1981)
*Bassett, Preston R; Arthur L. Hodges. "The History of Rockville Centre." (244 pp, Uniondale, New York: Salisbury Printers, 1969)
*Bassett, Preston R. Shadow Bands and Searchlights. "Popular Astronomy," Vol. XXXIII, No 4, pp1-5, April, 1925.
*Bassett, Preston R. Passenger Comfort in Air Transportation. "Journal Aeronautical Science," Vol. 2, pp 48-50, March, 1935.
*Bassett, Preston R. Long Island, Cradle of Aviation. "Long Island Forum," Amityville, NY, pp 1-42, November, 1950.
*Bassett, Preston R. Sperry's Forty Years in the Progress of Science. "Sperry Scope Corporate Newsletter," 1950.
*Bassett, Preston R. The Local Potters of Long Island. "The Long Island Courant," Vol. 1, No 1, pp 1-14, March, 1965.
*Bassett, Preston R. Towns in the Ridges. "The Bulletin of the Antiquarian and Landmarks Society of Connecticut," Vol. XVII, No 1, pp 6-10, July, 1965.
*Bassett, Preston R. The Silver Betty Lamp. "The Rushlight," Vol. XXXVI, No 1, pp 9-10, February, 1970.
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