Perry O. Crawford Jr.
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Perry Orson Crawford, Jr. (August 9, 1917 – December 13, 2006) was an American computer pioneer credited as being the first to fully realize and promote the value of digital, as opposed to analog, computers for real-time applications. This was in 1945 while advising
Jay Forrester Jay Wright Forrester (July 14, 1918 – November 16, 2016) was a pioneering American computer engineer and systems scientist. He is credited with being one of the inventors of magnetic core memory, the predominant form of random-access computer ...
in developing flight simulators and anti-aircraft fire control devices during World War II, before practical digital computers had been produced. His similar foresight on related issues led to his heading twelve years later the design team for IBM's
SABRE A sabre ( French: sabʁ or saber in American English) is a type of backsword with a curved blade associated with the light cavalry of the early modern and Napoleonic periods. Originally associated with Central European cavalry such as th ...
project, the ticketing system for
American Airlines American Airlines is a major airlines of the United States, major US-based airline headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, within the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex. It is the Largest airlines in the world, largest airline in the world when measured ...
, the first large-scale commercial application of real-time computer systems, which became the model for on-line transaction processing.


Early life and education

Crawford was born in Medford, Oregon, where his father, Perry Crawford Sr., an engineering graduate of Stanford University, oversaw construction on the
Klamath River Hydroelectric Project The Klamath River Hydroelectric Project is a series of hydroelectric dams and other facilities on the mainstem of the Klamath River, in a watershed on both sides of the California/Oregon border. The infrastructure was constructed between 1903 a ...
. His mother, Irma Zschokke Crawford, also a Stanford graduate, was an artist and a descendant of the Swiss writer and revolutionary figure,
Heinrich Zschokke Johann Heinrich Daniel Zschokke (22 March 177127 June 1848) was a German, later Swiss, author and reformer. Most of his life was spent, and most of his reputation earned, in Switzerland. He had an extensive civil service career, and wrote hist ...
. When his father became president of American Utilities Service Corporation in Chicago, Crawford attended
New Trier Township High School New Trier High School (, also known as New Trier Township High School or NTHS) is a public four-year high school, with its main campus for sophomores through seniors located in Winnetka, Illinois, United States, and a campus in Northfield, Illinoi ...
in Winnetka, Illinois. He entered the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is a private land-grant research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Established in 1861, MIT has played a key role in the development of modern technology and science, and is one of the ...
in 1936 to study electrical engineering and came to work under
Vannevar Bush Vannevar Bush ( ; March 11, 1890 – June 28, 1974) was an American engineer, inventor and science administrator, who during World War II headed the U.S. Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD), through which almost all wartime ...
with fellow student
Claude Shannon Claude Elwood Shannon (April 30, 1916 – February 24, 2001) was an American people, American mathematician, electrical engineering, electrical engineer, and cryptography, cryptographer known as a "father of information theory". As a 21-year-o ...
on the differential analyzer. The theses for his two degrees are considered to be among the earliest modern computer design documents. His B.Sc thesis, "Instrumental Analysis in Matrix Algebra" was completed in 1939. In summary:
Sketches the design of "an automatically controlled calculating machine" capable of performing a variety of matrix calculations, and incorporating means for scanning digital data represented on punched tape, for adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing two numbers, and for storing and printing or punching the data. A punched tape was to be used for sequence control, which would specify the selection of the numbers to be operated on, the operation to be performed, and the disposal of the result.
When Shannon completed his doctorate, Crawford succeeded him in the Center for Analysis as a postgraduate student. His M.Sc. thesis, "Automatic Control by Arithmetic Operations," (1942), continued the theme:
It is the purpose of this thesis to describe the elements and operation of a calculating system for performing one of the operations in the control of anti-aircraft gunfire, which is, namely, the prediction of the future position of the target. It is to be emphasized at the outset that little progress has been made toward the construction of automatic electronic calculating systems for any purpose. ... It can be proposed only that this thesis shows a possible approach to the design of a number of calculating system elements and to the structure of an arithmetical predictor. ... In this introduction, equipment for performing the operations occurring in automatic calculating is described. This equipment includes electronic switching elements, devices for multiplying two numbers, finding a function of a variable, recording numbers, translating mechanical displacements into numerical data, and for translating numerical data into mechanical displacements.
The thesis included a description of a matrix "selector switch," for implementing an arbitrary function or control sequence. Independently invented by
Jan A. Rajchman Jan Aleksander Rajchman (London, 10 August 1911 – 1 April 1989) was a Polish electrical engineer and computer pioneer. Biography Jan Aleksander was son of Ludwik Rajchman and Maria Bojańczyk. His father was a Polish bacteriologist and ...
, this device was incorporated, with acknowledgments, in the ENIAC. in a 1975 interview,
J. Presper Eckert John Adam Presper Eckert Jr. (April 9, 1919 – June 3, 1995) was an American electrical engineer and computer pioneer. With John Mauchly, he designed the first general-purpose electronic digital computer (ENIAC), presented the first course in co ...
, a designer of the ENIAC, described another contribution:
I had gotten the idea of using disks for memory, digital memory, from a master's thesis written by Perry Crawford at MIT. He had not built any such disks; it was just speculation.


Career


Office of Naval Research

From 1942 to 1945 Crawford served as a civilian attached to the Navy's Special Devices Section (a predecessor of the
Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division The Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division (NAWCTSD) is an Echelon IV command of the United States Navy, reporting to the Commander, Naval Air Warfare Center - Aircraft Division (NAWCAD) at NAS Patuxent River, Maryland. NAWCTSD is lo ...
) at Sands Point, Long Island. In 1946 this became the Special Devices Center under the newly created
Office of Naval Research The Office of Naval Research (ONR) is an organization within the United States Department of the Navy responsible for the science and technology programs of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. Established by Congress in 1946, its mission is to plan ...
(ONR). Crawford supervised the Navy Ballistics Computation Program until September 1948 when he accepted a temporary position  with the Research and Development Board of the Department of Defense. As head of the computer section in ONR he came into contact with
Jay Forrester Jay Wright Forrester (July 14, 1918 – November 16, 2016) was a pioneering American computer engineer and systems scientist. He is credited with being one of the inventors of magnetic core memory, the predominant form of random-access computer ...
at MIT who, with his collaborator Robert Everett (computer scientist), headed a project that had roots in developing flight simulators for pilot training and evolved into the Whirlwind Project which in turn prepared the way for the air-defense application SAGE (
Semi-Automatic Ground Environment The Semi-Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE) was a system of mainframe computer, large computers and associated computer network, networking equipment that coordinated data from many radar sites and processed it to produce a single unified image ...
). From Forrester's point of view, Crawford was a significant contributor and supporter whom he described as "uninhibited, not restrained by protocol or chain of command, and a freewheeling intervener in many circles of activity":
Perry Crawford was an electrical engineering graduate of MIT and a person with continually unfolding visions of futures that others had not yet glimpsed. He was the first person in about 1946 to call my attention to the possibility of digital rather than analog computers. He was always looking, listening, and projecting new ideas into the future. ... In the fall of 1947, following conversations with Perry Crawford, we wrote two documents, numbered L-1 and L-2, that showed how digital computers could manage a Naval task force and interpret radar data. In July 1948, at a conference at the University of California in Los Angeles, Crawford proposed using computers for the control of aircraft. On March 18, 1949, at a panel meeting of the Research and Development Board, he pushed the idea of digital computers in an air defense system.
Crawford also contributed to the
Moore School Lectures ''Theory and Techniques for Design of Electronic Digital Computers'' (popularly called the "Moore School Lectures") was a course in the construction of electronic digital computers held at the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School of Electrical ...
with a talk entitled "Applications of Digital Computation Involving Continuous Input and Output Variables" (August 5, 1946). It discussed such topics as missile and combat simulations and was originally classified as confidential and not published until . He stressed his conviction that these applications could best be performed with the aid of digital computers, a thesis many did not agree with at the time. He gave a talk at a session on electronic computers at the 1947 conference of the Institute of Radio Engineers on "Applications of Electronic Digital Computers" which was summarized in the program:
A discussion of computer applications, including scientific calculations, wave propagation, and aerodynamics. Comments will be made on the future relation of analogue and digital computers, and also on the possible engineering application of electronic digital computers to automatic process and factory control, air traffic control, and business calculations.


International Business Machines

Crawford left his civilian service in the Navy in 1952 to join IBM. The company had been working with the military on SAGE and anticipated further developments in real-time applications. in 1954
Thomas J. Watson, Jr Thomas John Watson Jr. (January 14, 1914 – December 31, 1993) was an American businessman, political figure, Army Air Forces pilot, and philanthropist. The son of IBM Corporation founder Thomas J. Watson, he was the second IBM president (1952 ...
., son of IBM's founder, oversaw Crawford's placement, along with Hans Peter Luhn, to head the design team for creating a digital computer system for managing American Airline's reservations and ticketing. Named SABRE (Semi-Automatic Research Environment), it soon grew to managing the total operation: flight planning, crew schedules, special meals, etc.
The project was at the time easily the largest civilian computerization task ever undertaken, involving some 200 technical personnel producing a million lines of program code. ... By the early 1970s all the major carriers possessed reliable real-time systems and communications networks that had become an essential component of their operations, second in importance only to the airplanes themselves.
Crawford continued in IBM until his retirement in 1988 working towards what he saw as a necessary "computer transition" as outlined in his 1979 publication below, but otherwise rarely publicized outside of IBM. In a 1980 interview R. Blair Smith, the IBM marketing manager whose contact with American Airlines initiated SABRE, described Crawford's Imaging project:
It's a shame we didn't bring it out, but there was a great need for Perry Crawford's concept of imaging. ... Perry's idea was to eliminate typical application programming altogether by having a master program; then have all of the data concerned with, say, running a given business available and identified in the computer. Then if somebody wanted a report of any kind, all he had to do was to tell the computer what was wanted, identify the data from which it would be drawn, and out would come the result. Now, that's an over-simplification. Obviously it would be terribly complex to do. It was a most difficult job, and it never got off the ground. ... I told him he'd have a tough time, because with the status of programming the way it is today, after all of these years of programming, and the programming languages we have developed, introducing the Imaging concept would be about as difficult as converting the typical American to the metric system today.


Personal life

Crawford married Marguerite (Peggy) Murtagh (1924-1979). They had five children.


Published works

* 1968. “Why CAI omputer aided instructionIs Really a Late, Late Show: The Coming of Age of the Computer.” pp. 20–25 in
Goodman, Walter, and Gould, Thomas F. (eds.), ''New York State Conference on Instructional Uses of the Computer. Final Report''. Proceedings of Conference, Tuxedo Park, N. Y., October 3-5, 1968.
“The computer and the unified media made possible by the computer become a new foundation of intellectual functioning of all forms including the forms that we call education and including the education of the young.” * 1969. "The New Views." ''Systematics: The Journal of The Institute for the Comparative Study of History, Philosophy and the Sciences'' 6.2, 114–16. * 1973. "Design Guide for Redesign." ''Impact on Instructional Improvement'' (Sponsored by the New York State Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.) 8.3, 19–28. The article presents an approach to the design of educational systems. The author is described as the president of his local Croton-Harmon Schools Board of Education. * 1974
"On the Connections Between Data and Things in the Real World."
pp. 51–57 in ''Management of Data Elements in Information processing: Proceedings of a Symposium Sponsored by the American Standards Institute and by the National Bureau of Standards''. First National Symposium, National Bureau of Standards, Gaithersburg, Maryland January 24–25, 1974. Washington DC: U.S. Department of Commerce. * 1979. " Alfred Korzybski and the Computer Transition." ''General Semantics Bulletin'' 47, 120–125.


Bibliography

* Green, Tom. ''Bright Boys: The Making of Information Technology''. CRC Press, 2010. * Redmond, Kent C., and Thomas M. Smith. ''Project Whirlwind : The History of a Pioneer Computer''. Bedford, MA: Digital Press, 1980. * Redmond, Kent C., and Thomas M. Smith. ''From Whirlwind to MITRE: The R&D Story of The SAGE Air Defense Computer''. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2000.


Notes


References

* * * * * * * Oral History of Computing, Science Museum, London, and National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, No. 3, Audiotape. * * * * * * * * * * * *


External links


Computer Oral History Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Houses tapes and transcript of 1970 interview with Perry O. Crawford, Jr.
Perry O. Crawford papers, MC-0509
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Distinctive Collections, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Accessed July 2, 2020.
Archives:The Computer Pioneers: The Whirlwind Computer.
The Engineering and Technology History Wiki. Accessed July 5, 2020. Video of a discussion in 1983, moderated by Perry Crawford, among the members and supporters of the Whirlwind team:
Jay Forrester Jay Wright Forrester (July 14, 1918 – November 16, 2016) was a pioneering American computer engineer and systems scientist. He is credited with being one of the inventors of magnetic core memory, the predominant form of random-access computer ...
, James Killian, Norman H. Taylor, Charles Adams, Dean Arden, J.T. Gilmore, Hal Laning, Robert Everett, and Robert Taylor.
Archives:The Computer Pioneers: Electronic Developments During World War II.
The Engineering and Technology History Wiki. Accessed July 5, 2020. Video of a discussion in 1983, moderated by Perry Crawford, among other pioneers: Kenneth Bowles,
Julius Stratton Julius Adams Stratton (May 18, 1901 – June 22, 1994) was a U.S. electrical engineer and university administrator. He attended the University of Washington for one year, where he was admitted to the Zeta Psi fraternity, then transferred to th ...
, Albert Hill, and Gordon Brown.
Perry O. Crawford, Computer Pioneers by J. A. N. Lee
IEEE Computer Society. Accessed July 30, 2020. {{DEFAULTSORT:Crawford, Perry MIT School of Engineering alumni 2006 deaths American computer scientists People from Medford, Oregon 1917 births