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Grace Murray Hopper Collection

American History Museum

Grace Murray Hopper Collection
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Object Details

Summary

Papers and photographs of Grace Murray Hopper (1906-1992) computer and Naval pioneer.

Scope and Contents

The material includes technical notes, operating instructions and descriptions relating to projects which Hopper participated in at Harvard during and after World War II and later in the private sector. These projects involved the creation of the Navy's Mark I, II and III "mechanical calculators" (the fore runners of today's computers) and the UNIVAC and ENIAC civilian models. The photographs document both equipment and Hopper with her colleagues at work and on social occasions. There are numerous published articles and memoranda by Hopper and others on various technical aspects of computers. Clippings of newspaper and magazine articles relating to computers and their development are also included, as well as periodicals and brochures. A "humor file" contains jokes and anecdotes collected by Hopper. Much of the material is annotated by Hopper, primarily through notations on 3 x 5 white slips of paper. Some of the annotations by Elizabeth Luebbert, who served as a summer research assistant in the Museum's Computer History Project.
sova.nmah.ac.0324

GUID

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8a1e4e5a0-fbd1-4ece-ad0c-dd83803a6168

Creator

Hopper, Grace Murray, 1906-1992

Former owner

National Museum of American History (U.S.). Division of Physical Sciences

Names

Remington Rand.

Occupation

Computer programmers

Topic

Computers
Computer programming
Computers and women
Mathematicians
Systems engineering
Univac computer

Provenance

Grace Murray Hopper donated her materials to the National Museum of American History, Section of Mathematics in 1967 and 1968. The majority of the collection was donated through the Museum's Computer Oral History Project in 1972.

Creator

Hopper, Grace Murray, 1906-1992

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Grace Murray Hopper Collection

Accruals

3 reels of film titled "Standardization of Computer Languages, Some Implications for the U.S. Navy," 1968, were added to the collection in May 2022. The films were transferred from the Division of Medicine and Science to the Archives Center. The immediate source of acquisition is unknown. An accession number was not assigned by the division. 3 boxes of materials (1 cubic foot) was transferred from the Division of Medicine and Science to the Archives Center in October 2022. The immediate source of acquistion is Grace Murray Hopper, presumably in 1984. An accession number was not assigned by the division.

Biographical / Historical

Grace Murray Hopper (1906-1992) obtained her Ph.D. in mathematics from Yale University in 1934. She was an associate professor of mathematics at Vassar College when she joined the Women's Reserve of the United States Navy, Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) in 1944 and was assigned to the computing project at Harvard University. She served under Commander Howard H. Aiken as a Wave until 1946, and remained at Harvard's Computation Laboratory as a research fellow until 1949. In that year she joined the Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation as a senior mathematician. When Eckert-Mauchly became a division of Remington Rand, Hopper remained as senior programmer, a title she retained until 1959. Subsequently, she served as systems engineer and director of automatic programming development (1959-1964) and staff scientist in systems programming (1964-1971) for the UNIVAC division of Sperry Rand Corporation. Hopper retired from UNIVAC in 1972, having returned to active service in the U.S. Navy from which she eventually retired with the rank of Rear Admiral. In 2016, President Obama posthumously awarded Rear Adm. Hopper the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Nation's highest civilian honor, awarded to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interest of the U.S. for her remarkable influence on the field of computer science.

Extent

2.5 Cubic feet (9 boxes, 1 map-folder)

Date

1944-1967

Custodial History

Collection transferred from the Division of Physical Sciences (now Division of Medicine and Science) to the Archives Center, February 6, 1989.

Archival Repository

Archives Center, National Museum of American History

Identifier

NMAH.AC.0324

Type

Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Articles
Photographs
16mm films
Technical notes
Videotapes

Citation

Grace Murray Hopper Collection, 1944-1965, Archives Center, National Museum of American History

Arrangement

The collection is divided into twelve series. Series 1: Technical Documents, 1944-1949 Series 2: Photographs of Mark II, 1948 Series 3: Photographs at Harvard, 1944-1945 Series 4: Reports and Articles, 1946-1948 Series 5: Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation, 1949-1965 Series 6: Compiling Routines, 1952-1954 Series 7: Press Clippings, 1944-1953 Series 8: Periodicals and Brochures, 1950-1953 Series 9: Humor file, 1944-1953 Series 10: Machine Tape, undated Series 11: Audiovisual Materials, undated Series 12: Addenda, 1949-1967

Processing Information

Collection processed by Don Darroch, 1990. Addenda processed by Alison Oswald, archivist, 2022.

Rights

Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.

Genre/Form

Articles -- 20th century
Photographs -- 20th century
16mm films
Technical notes
Videotapes

Restrictions

Collection is open for research.

Related Materials

Materials at the Archives Center Computer Oral History Collection (AC0196) This collection contains five oral history interviews with Grace Murray Hopper conducted on: July 1, 1968; November 1, 1968; January 7, 1969; February 4, 1969; and July 5, 1972.
NMAH.AC.0324
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8a1e4e5a0-fbd1-4ece-ad0c-dd83803a6168
NMAH.AC.0324
ACAH

Record ID

ebl-1562729477047-1562729477068-0

Showing 518 result(s)

  • Images 370 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Video recordings 3 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Electronic resource 1 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Archival materials 518 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Videocassettes (u-matic) 4 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Moving Images 3 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection 518 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 7: Press Clippings 87 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 5: Eckert-Mauchly Corporation 64 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 12: Addenda 48 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 2: Photographs of MARK II 45 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 1: Technical Documents 44 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 9: Humor File 28 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 1: Technical Documents / Photographs of blueprint drawings, contain all of the circuits of Mark I: 26 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 6: Compiling Routines 24 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 1: Technical Documents / Tables of constants for the Mark I. 13 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 4: Reports and Articles 13 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 8: Periodicals and Brochures / Systems for Modern Management 10 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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  • Grace Murray Hopper Collection / Series 4: Reports and Articles / Mathematical Tables and other Aids to Computation. 4 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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Addendum, The Barber-Colman Computer: Properties as of September 22, 1949,

(23) 8 January 1948 Test Panels A and B

(16) Parts of the Mark I. Cam, Relay, and Counter, early 1944.

(27) Lt. Hopper standing behind a car parked near Cruft Lab, 1945 to 1947 (?)

Exhibit C, The Education of a Computer"

Organization Chart A Family Tree of Computers Influences by Grace Hopper

(59) Working on the plugging of the Mark II, 1946. L to R: Hourihan, Huntsberger, Roche, Hawkins

(37) Cam Unit: rear view showing arc suppression and drive motor

(49) Preparing to board the bus at Harvard L to R: Aiken, Bloch, Arnold, Campbell, Lt. from Dahlgren, Calvin, Bissell

The A-2 Compiler by Dr. Grace Murray Hopper, 29 October 1953: 3 pages plus flowchart "Compiler Method of Problem Solution".

The BINAC: A Product of the Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation.

(75) Wheatland (?) looking through glass shelves with calculating machines to Campbell and Bloch sitting at their desks (Bloch looking toward camera), 1947. Computation Laboratory

(42) Lt. (J.G.) Lish Bailey and Gary Huntsberger beside a tree

Working Paper on a Vocabulary for Information Processing by a subcommittee of the American Standards Association

(19) Mark I from typewriters toward constant switches,

(14) Navy Specialists Operators of the Mark I, in front of the Mark I. L to R: White, Livingston, Calvin, Bissell, August 1944. (15) Calvin looking at typewriter and output, 1944.

Schedule "A" Electronic Machine

(5) AA 1000 Cam Unit

Successive Differences, undated

Mechanical Brains:

Systems Engineer, 14 August 1952; one tissue paper original copy by RDW, corrected in blue pencil by Herbert F. Mitchell; first definition of a systems engineer.

(23) White, seated in chair, looking at book,

Reciprocals of numbers 1-99

(16) 8 January 1948 Control Tape Preparation Unit


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