Howard N. Potts Medal

The Howard N. Potts Medal was one of The Franklin Institute Awards for science and engineering award presented by the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is named for Howard N. Potts. The awards program started in 1824.[1] The first Howard N. Potts Medal was awarded in 1911. After 1991, the Franklin Institute merged many of their historical awards into the Benjamin Franklin Medal.

Laureates

Following people received the Howard N. Potts Medal:[2][3]

  • 1911 - William Weber Coblentz (Physics)
  • 1912 - William Arthur Bone (Chemistry)
  • 1913 - James A. Bizzell (Earth Science)
  • 1913 - Thomas Lyttleton Lyon (Earth Science) for "Plants and Relation to Nitrate in Soils"
  • 1914 - Ralph Modjeski (Engineering)
  • 1916 - William Jackson Humphreys (Physics)
  • 1916 - William Spencer Murray (Engineering)
  • 1917 - Ulric Dahlgren (Life Science)
  • 1918 - Alexander Gray (Engineering)
  • 1918 - Arthur Edwin Kennelly (Engineering)
  • 1918 - Louis Vessot King (Engineering)
  • 1919 - Reynold Janney (Engineering)
  • 1919 - Clarence P. Landreth (Chemistry)
  • 1919 - Harvey D. Williams (Engineering)
  • 1920 - Wendell Addison Barker (Invention)
  • 1920 - Edward P. Bullard, Jr. (Engineering)
  • 1921 - Elmer Verner McCollum (Life Science)
  • 1921 - Alfred O. Tate (Engineering)
  • 1922 - Ernest George Coker (Physics)
  • 1922 - Charles R. Downs (Chemistry)
  • 1922 - Richard Bishop Moore (Chemistry)
  • 1922 - J. M. Weiss (Chemistry)
  • 1923 - Albert Wallace Hull (Chemistry) for x-ray crystallography
  • 1924 - John August Anderson (Engineering)
  • 1924 - William Gaertner (Engineering)
  • 1925 - Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (Physics)
  • 1926 - William David Coolidge (Physics)
  • 1926 - Howard W. Matheson (Chemistry)
  • 1927 - George E. Beggs (Physics)
  • 1927 - Marion Eppley (Engineering)
  • 1928 - Eugene C. Sullivan (Chemistry)
  • 1928 - William C. Taylor (Chemistry)
  • 1928 - Oscar G. Thurow (Engineering)
  • 1931 - Benno Strauss (Engineering)
  • 1932 - George Paget Thomson (Physics)
  • 1933 - Igor Ivanovich Sikorsky (Engineering)
  • 1934 - Ernst Georg Fischer (Engineering)
  • 1936 - Felix Andries Vening Meinesz (Engineering)
  • 1937 - John Clyde Hostetter (Engineering)
  • 1938 - Lars Olai Grondahl (Engineering)
  • 1939 - Newcomb K. Chaney (Engineering)
  • 1939 - H. Jermain Creighton (Engineering)
  • 1941 - Harold Eugene Edgerton (Engineering)
  • 1942 - Jesse Wakefield Beams (Physics)
  • 1942 - Harcourt Colborne Drake (Engineering)
  • 1942 - Bernard Lyot (Physics)
  • 1943 - Don Francisco Ballen (Life Science)
  • 1943 - Paul Renno Heyl (Physics)
  • 1945 - Edwin Albert Link (Engineering)
  • 1946 - Ira Sprague Bowen (Physics)
  • 1946 - Bengt Edlen (Physics)
  • 1946 - Sanford Alexander Moss (Engineering)
  • 1947 - Vladimir Kosma Zworykin (Engineering)
  • 1948 - Eugene Jules Houdry (Chemistry)
  • 1948 - Clarence A. Lovell (Engineering)
  • 1948 - David Bigelow Parkinson (Engineering)
  • 1949 - J. Presper Eckert, Jr. (Computer and Cognitive Science)
  • 1949 - Clinton Richards Hanna (Engineering)
  • 1949 - John William Mauchly (Computer and Cognitive Science)
  • 1950 - Merle Anthony Tuve (Engineering)
  • 1951 - Basil A. Adams (Engineering)
  • 1951 - Clifford M. Foust (Physics) [4]
  • 1951 - Eric Leighton Holmes (Chemistry)
  • 1956 - Edwin H. Land (Engineering)
  • 1958 - William Nelson Goodwin, Jr. (Engineering)
  • 1958 - Emanuel Rosenberg (Engineering)
  • 1959 - George W. Morey (Engineering)
  • 1960 - Charles Stark Draper (Engineering)
  • 1962 - Wilbur H. Goss (Engineering)
  • 1964 - Erwin Wilhelm Müller (Engineering)
  • 1965 - Christopher Sydney Cockerell (Engineering)
  • 1966 - Robert Kunin (Chemistry)
  • 1967 - John Louis Moll (Engineering)
  • 1968 - Heinrich Focke (Engineering)
  • 1969 - Albert Ghiorso (Chemistry)
  • 1969 - Charles P. Ginsburg (Engineering)
  • 1970 - Jacques-Yves Cousteau (Life Science)
  • 1971 - William David McElroy (Life Science)
  • 1972 - Jacques Ernest Piccard (Engineering)
  • 1973 - Charles Howard Vollum (Engineering)
  • 1974 - Jay Wright Forrester (Engineering)
  • 1975 - LeGrand G. Van Uitert (Engineering)
  • 1976 - Stephanie L. Kwolek (Engineering)
  • 1976 - Paul W. Morgan (Engineering)
  • 1977 - Godfrey N. Hounsfield (Life Science)
  • 1978 - Michael Szwarc (Chemistry)
  • 1979 - Seymour Roger Cray (Computer and Cognitive Science)
  • 1979 - Richard Travis Whitcomb (Engineering)
  • 1980 - Stanley G. Mason (Physics)
  • 1981 - August Uno Lamm (Engineering)
  • 1982 - Charles Gilbert Overberger (Chemistry)
  • 1983 - George G. Guilbault (Life Science)
  • 1983 - Paul Christian Lauterbur (Physics)
  • 1985 - William Cochran (Life Science)
  • 1986 - Martin David Kruskal (Physics)
  • 1986 - Norman J. Zabusky (Physics)
  • 1988 - Dudley Dean Fuller (Engineering)
  • 1989 - Sir Charles William Oatley (Physics)
  • 1991 - Richard E. Morley (Computer and Cognitive Science)
gollark: ||I wonder how well GPT-3-written stuff actually compares to *the majority of* human-written stuff, as opposed to the good stuff most people are going to read.||
gollark: You can also play HyperRogue if you want, well, hyperbolic geometry games, though it's more of a roguelike.
gollark: http://node-os.com/
gollark: There's also this one.
gollark: Presumably.

See also

References

  1. "Awards Program History". Franklin Institute. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  2. "Franklin Laureate Database - Howard N. Potts Medal Laureates". Franklin Institute. Archived from the original on May 2, 2014. Retrieved March 13, 2011.
  3. "Howard N. Potts Medal winners". Franklin Institute. Retrieved 2015-02-27.
  4. "Potts Medal Goes to C.M. Foust". New York Times. September 16, 1951. Retrieved 2015-02-27. The Franklin Institute announced today that a Howard N. Potts had been awarded to Clifford M. Foust ... high voltage surge phenomena ...
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.