Comfort A. Adams

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Comfort Avery Adams
Case School of Applied Science
AwardsIEEE Edison Medal (1956)
Scientific career
FieldsElectrical engineering

Comfort Avery Adams (November 1, 1868

AIEE Lamme Medal
.

Biography

Adams was born in

Cleveland, Ohio to Comfort Avery Adams Sr. and Katherine Emily Peticolas on November 1, 1868.[2]

"Doc Adams", as he was commonly addressed by his colleagues and friends, received his Honorary Doctorate of Engineering from his alma mater,

Case School of Applied Science, in 1925 after having been on the faculty at Harvard College and dean of their engineering school for almost 35 years. He later received his second honorary doctorate from Lehigh University in 1939. By that time he had retired from Harvard. In terms of an all-around American engineer in the early 20th century, Comfort A. Adams comes the closest to being America's answer to Britain's I. K. Brunel.[citation needed
]

Adams was president of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers[3] and the American Welding Society. He organized and chaired the Welding Research Council.

Adams married Elizabeth Chassis Parsons in 1894, and they adopted two children. Adams died at his home in

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on February 21, 1958.[4]

Honors and awards

  • Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1906)[5]
  • Honorary Doctor of Engineering from
    Case School of Applied Science
    1925
  • Honorary Doctor of Engineering from Lehigh University (1939)
  • Lamme Medalist
    of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers (1940)
  • IEEE Edison Medal (1956)
  • Delivered the first of the series of Adams Lectures founded in his honor by the American Welding Society
  • Samuel Wylie Miller Medal of the American Welding Society (first recipient)
  • Long-time member of the
    ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Committee
    , then Honorary Member
  • Honorary Member of the International Acetylene Association
  • Member of the
    National Academy of Sciences

Memberships

Club memberships

  • Harvard Faculty Club, Cambridge, Massachusetts
  • Engineers Club, New York
  • Engineers' Club of Philadelphia
  • Cedarbrook Country Club, Blue Bell, Pennsylvania

References

External links