Charles Proteus Steinmetz: Difference between revisions

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See also: [[Archives:Papers of Charles Proteus Steinmetz|Papers of Charles Proteus Steinmetz]]
See also: [[Archives:Papers of Charles Proteus Steinmetz|Papers of Charles Proteus Steinmetz]]


[[Category:IEEE|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Prominent members|Steinmetz]] [[Category:General topics for engineers|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Mathematics|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Scientific disciplines|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Electricity|Steinmetz]]
[[Category:IEEE|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Prominent members|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Scientific tools and discoveries|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Mathematics|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Scientific disciplines|Steinmetz]] [[Category:Electricity|Steinmetz]]

Revision as of 13:34, 16 May 2012

Charles Proteus Steinmetz

Signed portrait of Steinmetz 0293.jpg
Steinmetz was never married, fearful that deformed children like himself would be born, but had "acquired" a family by adopting a young engineer, J.L. Hayden, who later married and lived in the house with his wife and children that Charles had built for them. He loved children and was loved by them. The picture shows Steinmetz with the grandchildren Midge, Billy, Joe, and his adopted son, Joseph Hayden in 1914.

FOR more than 30 years Charles Proteus Steinmetz was a leader in the electrical industry, devoting his life to research, largely: relating to mathematical foundations upon which many of the developments in electrical engineering are based; there was scarcely a detail of any branch of electrical science or mathematics with which he was not conversant, Of his achievements among the most important were his investigations in the field of magnetism and his researches into the theory of direct and alternating current and the phenomena of lighting.

He was born on April 9, 1865 in Breslau, Germany, and was educated at the universities of Breslau and Berlin, and the Polytechnic in Zurich, Switzerland, specializing in mathematics, electrical engineering, and chemistry, and teaching mathematics at the same time. At 24, he left Germany because his socialistic affiliations barred him from preferment, and came to the United States practically penniless and knowing almost no English. Later he was naturalized, and became interested in politics in Schenectady. During a Socialist regime he was appointed president of the board of education of that city in 1912 and held the position throughout succeeding administrations until his death on October 26, 1923.

The first job he obtained was as draftsman at the Osterheld and Eickemeyer factory in Yonkers, N. Y.; soon he was given charge of all the new and experimental work in the establishment. Besides working on inventions for electric motors and generators and electric street cars, Doctor Steinmetz attracted attention by articles he contributed to scientific papers here and in Germany, especially on the theory of alternating currents. He was put in charge of the research laboratory and began to specialize on magnetic testing. In 1892, the firm merged with the General Electric Company and he was sent to Lynn, Mass.; the next year he was transferred to Schenectady as chief consulting engineer, remaining in that position until his death. In 1902 he became also professor of electrophysics at Union University.

Steinmetz and Einstein at RCA

He possessed a marvelous insight into all scientific phenomena and an unequaled ability to explain the most difficult and abstruse problems by systematic mathematical methods. He expressed his desire to communicate his fundamental knowledge to others in the sfimulating instruction he gave to his assistants at the General Electric and in the publication of a large number of scientific papers and electrical books, which have long been accepted as standard textbooks in colleges, laboratories, and workshops.

Doctor Steinmetz served the Institute as vice-president (1896-98), manager (1892-95; 1898-1901) and as committeeman at various times; he also contributed papers frequently to Institute meetings and publications, his first, in 1892, "On the Law of Hysteresis," marking a new epoch in electrical science. He was a member of numerous scientific and educational organizations. He received 2 honorary degrees, the A.M. from Harvard (1902) and Ph.D. from Union (1903).

Steinmetz was president of the AIEE from 1900-01.

Further Reading

See also: Papers of Charles Proteus Steinmetz