Oral-History:Westinghouse Electronic Systems: Difference between revisions
m (added Plante OH to list) |
m (Added link to Denton OH.) |
||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
[[Oral-History:Gwen Hays|Gwen Hays]] | [[Oral-History:Gwen Hays|Gwen Hays]] | ||
[[Oral-History:Ted Foster|Ted Foster]] | [[Oral-History:Ted Foster|Ted Foster]] | ||
[[Oral-History:John Gregory|John Gregory]] | |||
[[Oral-History:Herb Nunnally|Herb Nunnally]] | |||
[[Oral-History:Naomi McAfee|Naomi McAfee]] | |||
[[Oral-History:Robert Baim|Robert Baim]] | |||
[[Oral-History:William Smanko|William Smanko]] | |||
[[Oral-History:Kenneth Plante|Kenneth Plante]] | |||
[[Oral-History:Charles Denton|Charles Denton]] | |||
[[Category:Environment,_geoscience_&_remote_sensing|{{PAGENAME}}]] [[Category:Radar|{{PAGENAME}}]] | [[Category:Environment,_geoscience_&_remote_sensing|{{PAGENAME}}]] [[Category:Radar|{{PAGENAME}}]] |
Revision as of 20:57, 7 December 2010
Westinghouse Electronic Systems Oral History Project
In 2009-2010 The IEEE History Center undertook a joint project with the National Electronics Museum of Linthicum, Maryland to use oral history to document the history of the Westinghouse Electronic Systems Division of Baltimore, Maryland. Westinghouse Electronic Systems provided research, development, and manufacture of a range of electronic equipment for the United States Armed Forces and other U.S. government agencies from 1938 until it was sold to the Northrop-Grumman Corporation in 1996. Northrop-Grumman continues to operate the division today.
Among the products developed by Westinghouse Electronic Systems were a wide range of radar systems, air traffic control systems, airborne warning and control systems (AWACS) and the lunar Apollo-TV system.
The Westinghouse engineers interviewed for this project include: