Dick Morley

Richard E. "Dick" Morley (December 1, 1932 – October 17, 2017) was an American mechanical engineer who was considered one of the "fathers" of the programmable logic controller (PLC) since he was involved with the production of the first PLC for General Motors, the Modicon, at Bedford and Associates in 1968.[1] The Modicon brand of PLC is now owned by Schneider Electric. The PLC has been recognized as a significant advancement in the practice of automation, and has an important influence on manufacturing industry.

Richard E. Morley, a self-schooled engineer who dropped out of MIT, designed a rugged computer that revolutionized factory automation.

Biography

He was born in Clinton, Massachusetts, in 1932[2][3] and attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Legacy

An inventor, machinist, author, consultant and engineer, his peers have acknowledged his contributions with numerous awards from groups such as the International Society of Automation (ISA)[4], the Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society, Inc. magazine, the Franklin Institute, the Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME) and the Engineering Society of Detroit. He was also inducted into the Manufacturing Hall of Fame.

SME offers the Richard E. Morley Outstanding Young Manufacturing Engineer Award for outstanding technical accomplishments in the manufacturing profession by engineers age 35 and under.[5]

Morley worked out of his barn in New Hampshire where he and his wife had provided a home to 40 foster children. He died on October 17, 2017, in New Hampshire.[6]

Awards

  • 2016 Inducted into the Measurement, Control & Automation Hall of Fame by the Measurement, Control & Automation Association (MCAA)
  • 2016 Control System Integrators Association (CSIA) Lifetime Achievement Award
  • 2007–2008 SME Manufacturing Enterprise Council Member
  • 2006–2008 NH Judge - Hi Tech Council Product of the Year
  • 2006 Process Automation Hall of Fame (Control magazine)
  • 2005 SME Board of Directors
  • 1996 Automation Hall of Fame Prometheus Award
  • 1995 SME Fellow
  • 1993 Parallel Processor Design — Flavors
  • 1991 Howard N. Potts Medal
  • 1990 Entrepreneur of the Year
  • 1981 Gould Science & Engineering Fellow
  • Boeing Technical Excellence Award
gollark: Intel go to 28 * 8 and AMD to 128 * 2.
gollark: 364? Can you *get* 364 cores outside POWER and such?
gollark: As always, my phone's downloads folder (sorted by timestamp, filtered for images) is optimal.
gollark: Doubtful.
gollark: I'm also not entirely sure how the parser even works for units.

See also

References

  1. "Dick Morley - 'Father of the Programmable Logic Controller'", The Extension, vol 4 issue 2, March-April 2003
  2. Date information sourced from Library of Congress Authorities data, via corresponding WorldCat Identities linked authority file (LAF).
  3. The Father of the PLC – Dick Morley
  4. http://www.isa.org International Society of Automation (ISA)
  5. http://www.sme.org/cgi-bin/get-press.pl?&&20100019&PR&&SME& 2010 SME Richard E. Morley Outstanding Young Manufacturing Engineer Award Recipients Announced
  6. A Legend Passes: Dick Morley Died Today
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