Holley Medal

The Holley Medal is an award of ASME (the American Society of Mechanical Engineers) for "outstanding and unique act(s) of an engineering nature, accomplishing a noteworthy and timely public benefit by one or more individuals for a single achievement, provided the contributions are equal or comparable."[1]

The award was established in 1924 in honor of the American mechanical engineer, inventor and charter member of ASME Alexander Lyman Holley (1832-1888).

List of recipients[1]

gollark: The screws seem to be bizarre tiny hexagrams.
gollark: Standardized batteries are also important, and I don't think anything supports *those*, but that's a separate problem.
gollark: I have no idea where to get the batteries, and my phone has a metal case with tiny screws I can't use.
gollark: Can't.
gollark: Yes, nothing wrong with not being able to replace a *naturally degrading* *within the phone's lifespan* component without paying through the nose!

See also

References

  1. Holley Medal - ASME at asme.org. Accessed 08-05-2017
  2. Technology Review, Vol. 32, 1930, p. 208
  3. Electrical World, Vol. 126, 1946, p. 69
  4. Power Engineering, Vol. 56, 1952. p. 107
  5. Mechanical Engineering, Vol. 77, 1955, p. 558
  6. Mechanical Engineering, Vol. 96, 1974. p. 87
  7. Mechanical Engineering, Vol. 97, 1975, p. 83
  8. Mechanical Engineering: The Journal of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The Society, 1980. p. 149
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