Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2009
This article considers how and why American industry has supported research and development during the last century. It examines the differences in methods and results of Thomas Edison (inventor-entrepreneur), William Coolidge (General Electric engineer-scientist), and Irving Langmuir (General Electric Nobel Prize winner). The article concludes that Edison's effective use of organized research and development paved the way for scientifically trained people to use varied methodologies to advance science, technology, and commercial interests together.
He would like to acknowledge the Smithsonian Institution, the Harvard Business School, and Rutgers University for support while working on research for this article.Google Scholar
1 Quoted in Broderick, John, Willis R. Whitney (Albany, 1945), p. 188.Google Scholar For background on the establishment of industrial research in the United States, see Reich, Leonard, The Making of American Industrial Research: Science and Business at GE and Bell, 1876–1926 (New York, 1985).Google Scholar
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3 Information on these and many other inventions can be gleaned from materials in the archives of the Edison National Site, West Orange, New Jersey. Forthcoming volumes of The Thomas A. Edison Papers (Johns Hopkins University Press) will contain selected documents and references.Google Scholar
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