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THE EE DODRANSCENTENNIAL Engineering
Engineering at The Citadel
Electrical Engineering at The Citadel
Great Engineering Feats of the 20th Century
20. High Performance Materials
19. Nuclear Technologies
18. Lasers and Fiber Optics
17. Petroleum and Gas Technologies
16. Health Technologies
15. Household Appliances
14. Imaging Technologies
13. Internet
12. Space Exploration
11. Interstate Highways
Great Engineering Feats of the 20th Century
10. Air Conditioning and Refrigeration
9. Telephone
8. Computers
7. Agricultural Mechanization
6. Radio and Television
5. Electronics 4. Safe and Abundant Water 3. Airplanes
2. Automobiles
1. Electrification
Engineering at The Citadel
“The first six men graduated on November 20, 1846. Ranging in age from eighteen to twenty-one at the time, they chose professions as follows: Two became civil engineers, two, educators, one, a physician and one, a lawyer.”
From an historical sketch, “The Citadel and Engineering”, by Dr. James F. Scoggins, Jr.
The leading object of the School “is to prepare its graduates for the business of life. Its aim will be mainly scientific.”
From the Superintendent’s Official Circular, August 12, 1886
Before 1900, the scientific content accounted for 3,220 hours of instruction, excluding military subjects. This was considerably more than the science content of curricula at Vanderbilt, Tennessee or Alabama. On this basis the State authorized The Citadel to grant the Bachelor of Science degree as of February 1, 1900.
From an historical sketch, “The Citadel and Engineering”, by Dr. James F. Scoggins, Jr.
An Auspicious Beginning The Beginning: Growing the South's Economy
Dr. W. Gill Wylie, James Buchanan Duke and William States Lee founded Catawba Power Company in the early 1900s because they felt the South's heavy dependence on agriculture was prohibiting growth of other industries – and so they envisioned an integrated electric system of hydro-powered generating stations. [from Duke Energy website]
William States Lee
C.E. The Citadel, 1894
President of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, 1930-1931
IEEE formed by merger of the AIEE and IRE on January 1, 1963.
Thus is could be said that this Citadel Electrical Engineer made huge contributions nearly 50 years before the department was formed, and the first degree awarded.
Ten Years on the Runway
26 SEP 41
General Order 7
JUN 43
Citadel upperclassmen withdrawn for service
SEP 48
First Seven EE degrees awarded
5 JUN 53
COL Razor Requests Release from Physics Department Duties
15 JUN 53
EE Department separated from Physics
June 1941 “For a number of years a growing need has been apparent for a course at The Citadel in Electrical Engineering.”
• May 30, 1941, The Citadel Board of Visitors authorize the establishment of a department of electrical engineering “as soon as arrangements can be completed.”
• Admit freshmen, and some sophomores in September 1941.
• Juniors to be added in September 1942 and Seniors in September 1943
The Curriculum Freshman Year
Mathematics 101-102, 5 hrs. Mechanical Drawing 101-102, 3 hrs. English 101-102, 5 hrs. Chemistry 101-102, 4 hrs.
History 101-102, 3 hrs.
Sophomore Fall Semester Analytical Geometry 201, 5 hrs. English Literature 201, 3 hrs. Physics 201, 4 hrs. Surveying, C.E. 205, 4 hrs. Desc. Geom. And Machine Dr. C.E. 201, 203, 3 hrs.
Sophomore Spring Semester Calculus 202, 5 hrs. English Literature 202, 3hrs. Physics 202, 4 hrs. Surveying, C.E. 206, 4 hrs. Graphic Statics, C. E. 202, 1 hr.
Junior Fall Semester Calculus 301, 3 hrs. Analytical Mech., C. E. 301, 3hrs. Physics 301, 3 hrs. Economics, B.A. 202, 3 hrs. Electrical Measurements Lecture, 3 hrs. Electrical Measurements Lab, 2 hrs.
Junior Spring Semester Differential Equations 302, 3 hrs. Analytical Mech., C. E. 302, 3hrs. Physics 302, 3 hrs. Thermodynamics, 3 hrs. EE Principles, D.C., 3 hrs. EE Laboratory, D.C., 2 hrs.
Senior Fall Semester Hydraulics, C.E. 407, 3 hrs. EE Principles, A.C., 3 hrs. EE Laboratory, A.C., 2 hrs. Electronics, Lecture, 3hrs. Electronics Laboratory, 2 hrs. Power Plant Engineering, 3 hrs.
Senior Spring Semester Business Law, B.A. 305, 3 hrs. Electronics (Circuits), 3 hrs. Electronics Laboratory, 2 hrs. Public Speaking 205, 3hrs. EE Lecture, Advanced A. C. Theory, 3 hrs. EE Laboratory, 3 hrs.
What a Start! “In 1941, the Board of Visitors directed Colonel N. F. Smith, Head of the Department of Physics, to organize and conduct a Department of Electrical Engineering at The Citadel. This department was authorized to provide for the considerable number of young men who wished to attend The Citadel, but who were then compelled to go elsewhere to obtain instruction in Electrical Engineering.
Under the direction of Colonel Smith, I was assigned to the organization and operation of this new department. In June 1943, forty five students who were ready to enter the junior class in Electrical Engineering were withdrawn to service in the Armed Forces, along with the upper-classmen in all other departments. At the same time, Colonel Smith retired from service to The Citadel and I was appointed to the direction of both departments.
Excerpt from letter, COL C. T. Razor to GEN C. P. Summerall, June 5, 1953
“Upon the cessation of hostilities…” “Upon the cessation of hostilities, instruction in Electrical Engineering finally began, and the first class of eight men was graduated in September, 1948.” Excerpt from letter, COL C. T. Razor to GEN C. P. Summerall, June 5, 1953
T. V. Morrow
O. L. Herring
W. L. Evans, Jr.
F. C. Gonzales
E. O. Rehm, Jr.
L. F. Ostendorff, Jr.
J. I. Rogers
First Charleston Graduate
Early “Evidence” of Electrical Engineering Post War, veteran students outnumbered cadets by more than 2 to 1.
High Engineering Enrollment
The Citadel Engineer
Self-proclaimed to be the most popular publication on campus.
Published 1941 – 1956, with break from 1947 – 1949
Bound copies in The Daniel Library Rare Book Room.
AIEE American Institute of Electrical Engineers
“In February, 1947, eight students and four faculty members of the Department of Electrical Engineering formed an organization known as the Citadel Electrical Engineering Society to advance the professional interests of electrical engineering on campus and to work toward obtaining a charter for a Student Branch of the AIEE at The Citadel.”
• Enthusiastically supported by the Charleston Subsection of the AIEE, of which Col. Razor was the 1947 president.
• Grew to 80 members (upper classes only)
• Formally petitioned the AIEE in May 1949
• The Citadel Student Branch of the AIEE was authorized in October 1949.
• Formal Installation held at The Fort Sumter Hotel on December 5, 1949.
A Busy Decade? Program Established
28 Graduates in Two Graduating Years
Student Branch of AIEE
Four or Five EE/Physics Faculty
COL Charles T. Razor BS, U of Kentucky
MS, MSEE, U of Michigan Professor of EE
1LT Oren L. Herring, Jr. BS, The Citadel Instructor in EE
1LT John W. Evans, Jr. BEE, Clemson College
Instructor in EE
MAJ Alvin W. Hanson AB, Buena Vista College
MS, PhD, U of Iowa Associate Professor of Physics
and EE
2LT Walter E. Blackwell BS, The Citadel, BS in EE, Georgia
Institute of Technology Instructor in EE
The 1950’s, A Decade of Challenges
Separate from Physics
Dramatic Fluctuations in Class Size
Program Review
Faculty and Students
Date: June 5, 1953 To: General Charles P. Summerall, President of The Citadel
Enrollment Boom, Bottoms and Rebounds
Returning veterans at one time outnumbered cadets by more than 2 to 1.
Large EE enrollment in the 1950’s.
The third Citadel EE class graduates 56.
Three years later, 1953, has 8 EE graduates.
Enrollment climb and EE exits the decade with 58 graduates
Largest EE graduating class on record.
Electrical Engineering Changes Fast General Mark W. Clark orders a “review of Programs and Curriculum,
Electrical Engineering Department of the Citadel”
To make it “and activity that will live up to the high standards of the electrical engineering world.”
October 25 – 26, 1957
Mr. L. R. Cook, AVP Engineering, Western Electric
Dr. B. J. Dasher, Director, School of EE, Georgia Institute of Technology
Dr. Irving Wolff, VP of Research, RCA Laboratories
“The electrical engineer being trained today will have to concern himself with such diverse subjects as thermonuclear power, giant aggregations of electronic equipment consisting mostly of various types of electronically active materials (some of which require operation at liquid helium temperature), design of apparatus with reliability well beyond today’s accomplishments, and many other projects not yet conceived.”
Recommendations “The staff problem is really critical”
Hire three additional faculty Hire a technician Supply some secretarial support
“The Electrical Engineering Department is operating on a minimum facilities basis.” Continue the current yearly appropriation Obtain supplemental funds to address deficiencies
“Electrical Engineering curricula are in a state of change…toward more scientific treatment of engineering…greater emphasis on principles, less emphasis on devices…wider choice of electives”
Discontinue Engineering Drawing, Surveying, Heat Engines and Power Plant Engineering and Design
Add Electromagnetic Theory and Advanced Electronics Circuits
“It is generally recognized that the so-called humanistic social studies should not be omitted.”
Faculty in the 50’s 1954 Razor, Evans, Herring
1956 Razor, Yates, Herring
1958 Razor, Yates, Mitchell, Herring
1959 Razor, Yates, Mitchell, Herring, Griswold
1960 Herring, Cory, Griswold, Mitchell
A Challenging Decade Department Established
Significant Program Review
Faculty Evolves, Head Changes
312 graduates
They are all smiling.
Wait, is that Guy White?
The 1960’s
Student Recognition Endowed
Electrical Engineering Students in the News
IEEE
Razor Lecture Series
Faculty and Students
Student Recognition Endowed
Peter Gaillard, Citadel ’48
1960 Russell Benjamin Spencer
1961 Ronald David McDaniel
1962 Timothy Meyer
1963 Charles H. Schley, Jr.
1964 Robert Hough Fletcher
1965 Daryl W. Donahey, Jr.
1966 Henry Patrick Green
1967 John Frederick Hodges
1968 Donald A. Conrad
1969 Samuel Williams Hammond
Charles Thurston Razor, Head, ’41-’58
1960 Henry M. Reed, II
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966 Edwin Fred Rappe, Jr.
1967 Jack K. Massie, II
1968 Byron A. Abbott
1969
All winners are memorialized on plaques on the third floor of Grimsley Hall
The 1960’s From Bioengineering
EE and Pre-Med students team on wireless temperature monitor.
To Weather Satellites
Believed to be the first direct reception and weather imaging in SC
AIEE/IRE to IEEE January 1, 1963
AIEE and IRE merge to form the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
150,000 members as of that date
The Citadel Student Branch
The Citadel Student IEEE Branch 1969
Razor Lecture Series Begun in 1967 as a professional activity event for
students
Impressive roster of speakers
Enthusiastically supported by the Coastal Carolina Section of the IEEE
You are enjoying the 2017 Razor Lecture (I hope)
1960s Graduates and Faculty 221 Electrical Engineering Graduates • 56 in the Class of 1960 Faculty begins to stabalize • 1960 Herring, Cory, Griswold, Mitchell • 1961 Herring, Cory, Griswold, Johnson, Mitchell • 1964 Herring, Cory, Faulk, Johnson, • 1969 Herring, Cory, Johnson, Scoggins
I am sure that is Bud Askins!
Accreditation The overarching goal since 1941.
The need for alignment with the Engineering Council on Professional Development (ECPD) was explicit at the outset. Letters between Dr. Newland Farnsworth Smith and colleagues at Michigan and MIT support intent.
WWII and COL Razor’s death delayed the effort as the bar for accreditation was being raised.
By the mid-1960’s it was apparent that faculty credentials were a limiting factor.
COL Herring began targeted recruitment of faculty.
Accreditation James Scoggins, PhD in Physics joined the department in 1963
Harold Askins, PhD in EE joined in 1974
After obtaining and compiling data on professional registration, advanced degrees and salaries from nearly 300 of the 600+ graduates surveyed, and completing a significant self study of the department’s faculty, staff, students, facilities and curriculum, COL Herring requests an ECPD visit
The Citadel EE Department received ECPD accreditation in fall 1976.
ECPD was renamed the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology, now simply ABET, in 1980.
1970s Graduates and Faculty
156 Electrical Engineering Graduates
Faculty Retirement and Growth • 1970 Herring, Cory, Johnson, Scoggins • 1974 Herring, Johnson, Scoggins, Askins • 1976 Herring, Scoggins, Askins, Dornetto • 1979 Herring, Scoggins, Askins, Stinson
And here’s … Buddy
Tau Beta Pi December 1979
21 Letters of Petition, including
The Citadel, James B. Stockdale, President
The Citadel Board of Visitors, William F. Prioleau, Jr., Chairman
The Advisory Board to The Citadel Board of Visitors, Mark W. Clark
Santee Cooper, William Mescher, President
SC DOT, Paul W. Cobb, Commissioner
Duke Power Company, W. H. Owen, Sr. Vice President
January 28, 1980
Visitation by 15 member Tau Beta Pi committee
“The unanimous conclusion of the committee is to recommend that a chapter be granted to The Citadel.”
From the February 15, 1980 Inspection Report to the Executive Council
Chapter Honors The Benjamin Franklin Medal
Initiated in 1998 to represent the combined legacies of several historic medals. It is awarded by The Franklin Institute, whose awards are among the oldest and most prestigious comprehensive science awards in the world. 20 Tau Beta Pi members have been named Benjamin Franklin laureates.
Two are members of SC Gamma
Tau Beta Pi Laureates
The Tau Beta Pi Laureate Program was formally established by the 1984 Convention after a three-year trial basis to recognize annually up to five Tau Beta Pi student members who outstandingly exemplify the "spirit of liberal culture in engineering colleges." Award categories include arts, athletics, diverse achievements, and service.
EE OC Michael Lacey was named TBP Laureate in 2014
Electrical Engineering at Night Established in late 1980s as a four years of study at The Citadel to
address a regional need for non-cadet engineering education.
Dramatic addition to faculty overloads
Inefficient use of general education faculty
Evolved to the current, highly successful 2+2 structure by 1994.
First Six Evening Program Graduates in 1992 included the first two females to receive a Citadel EE degree.
Frank E.Brammer Frank M. Dubis Jennifer D. Garcia Ellen D. Hechmer Earl D. Schultz Courtney T. Whitney Timothy J. Wall
278 EE EUGS Degrees to date
80s Graduates and Faculty 242 Electrical Engineering Graduates
1988 Herring Retires • 1980 Herring, Scoggins, Askins, Dornetto, Stinson • 1983 Herring, Scoggins, Askins, Dornetto, Stinson, Dwan • 1986 Herring, Scoggins, Askins, Dornetto, Stinson, Scheaffer • 1989 Askins, Scoggins, Dornetto, Stinson, Epple, Bose
Ladies and Gentlemen, Marc Tye.
90s Graduates and Faculty 253 Electrical Engineering Graduates
Searching for the right combination • 1990 Askins, Scoggins, Dornetto, Stinson, Epple, Bose, Dunlop • 1991 Askins, Dornetto, Stinson, Epple, Dunlop, Bose, Kunze • 1992 Askins, Dornetto, Stinson, Dunlop, Kunze, Evans • 1993 Askins, Dornetto, Stinson, Epple, Dunlop, Evans • 1994 Askins, Dornetto, Epple, Dunlop, Jerse • 1995 Askins, Dornetto, Epple, Dunlop, Jerse, Walsh (1 semester) • 1996 Askins, Dornetto, Epple, Dunlop, Jerse, Murphy • 1997 Askins, Dornetto, Epple, Dunlop, Jerse, Murphy, McKinney • 1999 Askins, Dornetto, Dunlop, Murphy, McKinney, Peeples
The Second Millennia
2001 - Advisory Board Student Competitions Faculty, Staff and Students
Things I Should, but Don’t Have Time to Talk About
The School of Engineering EWeek takes off 2009 - Bernard Gordon 2011 - Storm The Citadel 2016 – First Mechanical Engineering Graduates 2017 - Masters of Science in Electrical Engineering
ECE Advisory Board November 30, 2001
James A. (Buddy) Black ’78, President, Nova Technologies
Frank Bryant ’65 Honeywell
Joe Busby, PhD ’61, CEO, Optiquest
Tom Campbell, Fellow IEEE ’61 NASA (retired)
Blake Causey, P. E., ’88, Scientific Atlanta
Tina DeFelice, VP, NCR
Keith Ellmers ’75, Corps of Engineers
Larry Hargrouve, ‘66 , Sr. VP, Life Cycle Engineering
John Matthews, PhD, P.E., John Matthews and Associates
Harold Pastrick, PhD, VP, SRS Technologies
Clayton Paul, PhD ’63, Mercer University
Jim Reaves ’73, SPAWAR
Bill Rixon ‘67, CE, Duke Energy
Carl Rust ‘82, GaTech Research Institute
Charles Schley PhD, ’63, Chroma
Mitch Tibshrany, SCE&G
Bob Walker ‘89, Trident Technical College
Tim Washington, Scientific Research Corporation
Guy White III ’56, Guy White and Associates
Excerpt from January 2002 Letter to the Board from Chairman Joe Busby “Some of the recurring issues in these reports that the Board should consider addressing are: Recruiting students into the program. Qualifications of students entering the program. Compensation of the Faculty. The curriculum. The scheduled visit of the ABET team in the fall of 2002 (Examine the EC2000 criteria requirements). Capital equipment for the laboratory.”
It all Began one Cold February Day
Engineers Week (every year near the Presidents’ Day holiday) was not getting the Electrical Engineering play it should at The Citadel.
Mark McKinney decided to up our game Lego® Baseball was born
Then Lego® Golf
The rest is history.
Until 2011 …
‘00s Graduates and Faculty/Staff 258 Electrical Engineering Graduates
• 2000 Askins, Dornetto, Dunlop, Murphy, McKinney, Peeples • 2001 Askins, Dunlop, McKinney, Peeples, Jerse • 2002 Askins, Dunlop, McKinney, Peeples, Jerse, Barsanti • 2004 Peeples, Askins, McKinney, Jerse, Barsanti, Horner • 2005 Peeples, Askins, McKinney, Jerse, Barsanti, Potisuk • 2006 Peeples, McKinney, Jerse, Barsanti, Potisuk, Skinner, Hayne
Carmela Trez and Darrell Crawford shoulder the heavy loads throughout the decade.
‘10s Faculty 297 Electrical Engineering Graduates in first 6 years of the decade
• 2010 Peeples, McKinney, Jerse, Barsanti, Potisuk, Skinner, Hayne • 2013 Peeples, McKinney, Barsanti, Potisuk, Skinner, Hayne, Mazzaro • 2015 Barsanti, McKinney, Peeples, Potisuk, Skinner, Hayne, Mazzaro
Finally, a New Department Head, Welcome Bart and Greg
Faculty Summary
Three to Seven faculty members
Five Department Heads
Oren Herring, Jr. - 30 years
32 Professors
First PhD, 1969
First PhD in EE, 1974
70 degrees from 31 institutions
The Citadel (9), U of SC (7), Clemson (6), USMA (4)
Graduate Summary 1767 BS in EE degrees awarded 1948 – 2016
43 EE graduates anticipated May 2017
First (1948) and Largest Graduating Classes by Decade
1948 7
1949 21
1959 58
1960 56
1972, 74 19
1986 35
1999 37
2004 36
2015 53