Cecil Howard Green
Cecil Howard Green (August 6, 1900 – April 11, 2003) was a British-born American geophysicist who trained at the University of British Columbia and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was a founder of Texas Instruments. With his wife Ida Green, he was a philanthropist who helped found the University of Texas at Dallas, Green College at the University of British Columbia, St. Mark's School of Texas, and Green College at the University of Oxford. They were also major contributors to the Cecil H. Green Library at Stanford University, and the Cecil & Ida Green Building for earth sciences at MIT (designed by I.M. Pei).http://www-tech.mit.edu/archives/VOL_084/TECH_V084_S0225_P002.pdf
Related Topics:
August 6 - 1900 - April 11 - 2003 - British - American - Geophysicist - University of British Columbia - Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Texas Instruments - Ida Green - Philanthropist - University of Texas at Dallas - Green College - St. Mark's School of Texas - Green College - University of Oxford - Cecil H. Green Library - Stanford University - I.M. Pei
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Born in Whitefield, a suburb of Manchester, England, on August 6, 1900, Mr. Green and his family migrated to Nova Scotia, Toronto, and San Francisco. There, as a witness to the great 1906 San Francisco earthquake, young Cecil received his first lesson in geophysics, the field in which he would make his fortune. The family moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, until young Cecil went to Massachusetts Institute of Technology, earning a bachelor's and master's degree in electrical engineering.
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Manchester, England - Nova Scotia - Toronto - San Francisco - 1906 San Francisco earthquake - Geophysics - Vancouver, British Columbia - Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Electrical engineering
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Cecil met Ida in 1923, while working on his master's thesis at the General Electric Research Center in Schenectady, New York, he met Ida Flansburgh. They were married 60 years until Ida died in 1986.
Related Topics:
General Electric - Schenectady, New York
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The couple crisscrossed the country five times, making their home in auto camps and tents. Cecil worked as an engineer for electronics companies. He unsuccessfully tried to sell neon signs in Canada. He answered want ads for jobs selling everything from insurance to automobiles. But once he found a job in geophysical exploration, his fortune was all but made. In 1930, the Greens moved to Oklahoma where Cecil accepted a job from Eugene McDermott as chief of a seismographic field crew for the newly organized Geophysical Service Inc. (GSI). Founded in May 1930 in Dallas, Texas, GSI was one of the first independent prospecting companies established to perform reflection seismic exploration for petroleum. There was a lot of oil to be found and a lot of money to be made.
Related Topics:
Eugene McDermott - Geophysical Service Inc. - Reflection seismic exploration - Petroleum
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In 1941, Mr. Green and three partners -- J. Erik Jonsson, Eugene McDermott and H.B. Peacock -- bought GSI when they heard the owners planned to sell the oil production unit. Mr. Green borrowed money, took out a mortgage, committed his and Ida's insurance policies as collateral and scraped together everything they owned to pay his share. The deal went through on December 6, 1941, the day before Pearl Harbor was bombed. It just so happened that GSI had developed a towed magnetometer for oil exploration. It was not particularly useful for finding oil but very useful indeed for finding enemy submarines. GSI continued to prosper.
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Under the leadership of Mr. Green and his team, which by the end of the decade included Pat Haggerty, GSI became a geophysical exploration service leader. But it was the electronics work begun during World War II that was to make important technology history. In 1951, the company's name was changed to Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI), and GSI became a wholly owned subsidiary of TI.
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Mr. Green served as vice president (1941-1951), president (1951-1955) and chairman of GSI (1955-1959). He also served as vice president and director of Texas Instruments and in 1976 was named honorary director of the company.
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Today, Texas Instruments is the world's leading designer and supplier of digital signal processing and analog technologies, the engines driving the Internet age. Headquartered in Dallas, Texas, TI in 2004 had $12.6 billion in revenues ($10.9B Semiconductor) with more than 34,000 employees worldwide.
Related Topics:
Digital signal processing - Dallas, Texas
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The growth of TI made Cedil Green an enormously wealthy man, and he and Ida quickly set about giving his wealth away. The Green's philanthropic efforts totalled over 200 million dollars, and most of this money was given to education and medicine. He was given an honorary knighthood in 1991 (at age 91) by Queen Elizabeth II.
Related Topics:
1991 - Elizabeth II
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