- Willis Adcock
Infobox Person
name = Willis Adcock
caption =
birth_date =November 25 ,1922
birth_place = Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu,
Quebec ,Canada
death_date =December 16 ,2003
death_place = Austin,Texas
other_names =
known_for =
occupation =Chemist Professor
Electrical engineer
nationality = flagicon|CanadaCanadian
flagicon|United States AmericanDr. Willis Alfred Adcock (
November 25 ,1922 –December 16 ,2003 ) was aCanadian-American Physicalchemist ,university professor , and electrical engineer who worked on the first atomic bomb and assisted with the invention of thesilicon transistor , as well as theintegrated circuit . He held several USpatent s.Early life
Willis Adcock was born in
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec ,Canada on November 25, 1922. He went tograde school in Clarenceville,Quebec . Heemigrated to theUnited States in 1936 to live with his uncle so that he could attendhigh school in Champlain, New York, as Clarenceville did not havea high school at the time.http://www.ieee.org/portal/cms_docs_iportals/iportals/aboutus/history_center/oral_history/pdfs/Adcock403.pdf accessed 19 February 2008]He attended Hobart College where he obtained a B.S. in Math and Chemistry in 1944. After graduating Adcock joined the Army where he became a technical staff member in the Clinton Laboratories in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee . While in the Army, he applied for and received United States citizenship and he was a member of the team that developed the atomic bomb. He left the Army in 1948 to pursue his Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry atBrown University .http://web.hws.edu/alumni/remarkable/displaynotablealum.asp?notablealumid=64 accessed 19 February 2008]Work
He had a brief stint as a technical staff member for Stanolind Oil and Gas Company in
Tulsa, Oklahoma , later known as Pan American Oil Co., later still a part ofAmoco .http://www.halliburton.com/news/archive/1999/hesnws_062199.jsp accessed 19 February 2008] , before becoming manager of development at the Integrated Circuits Department atTexas Instruments , inDallas, Texas . At Texas Instruments, he grew silicon boules for construction of the first silicon transistor, he later assisted with the development of the first silicon integrated circuits built at TIhttp://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=17000430 accessed 19 February 2007] .He left Texas Instruments for a year in 1964 to work as technical director for Sperry Semiconductor in
Norwalk, Connecticut , but returned to TI in 1965 as manager of advanced planning and technical development. He was later assistant vice president and finally vice president of corporate staff from 1982 until his retirement from TI in 1986.After retiring from TI, Adcock moved to
Austin, Texas and became a professor of electrical and computer engineering at theUniversity of Texas at Austin where he contributed articles to professional journals and developed a novel SEMATECH Research Center of Excellence at the University. Adcock was a fellow of the I.E.E.E. and
A.A.A.S., and was a member of theNational Academy of Engineering , theAmerican Chemical Society andSigma XI . He was aPhi Beta Kappa Principal Fellow of the Texas Institute. Adcock was awarded an honorary degree from Hobart College in 1989. He also provided oral commentary for an Electronic Watch exhibit at theSmithsonian Institution http://smithsonianchips.si.edu/texas/watch.htm accessed 19 February 2007] .Adcock was awarded patents for the first electronic photography system (originally filed in 1972, patents 4057830 and 4163256 were awarded in 1976 and 1977).http://www.digicamhistory.com/1970s.html accessed 19 February 2008] Adcock most recently received a government patent for his Gyroscopic Torque Converter in 2003. http://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/2003-2004/memorials/adcock/adcock.html accessed 19 February 2008]
Personal life
Adcock married his college sweetheart, Eleanor Goller (
William Smith College class of 1944). They had four children before Eleanor died in 1970. He was remarried to Sara McCoy Whiddon. Adcock died on December 16, 2003 in Austin, Texas.See also
*
List of University of Texas at Austin people
*List of Brown University people
*List of Southern Methodist University people References
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