Skip to main content
  • Utility Menu
  • Search
Harvard Logo
HARVARD.EDU

Collections Menu
  • Waywiser
  • People
  • Bibliography
  • Exhibitions
  • Thesaurus
  • My Object Lists
  • About
  • Sign in
Advanced Search
  • Home
  • People
  • Department of Physics, Harvard University

Department of Physics, Harvard University

founded 1884

View All Objects
The Department of Physics at Harvard University was founded in 1884, with the opening of a new physics laboratory, but the study of physics at Harvard predates this. Natural philosophy and physics-related studies were part of the first curriculum at Harvard when it opened in 1636.
The study of physics at Harvard, of course, predates this. Natural philosophy and physics-related studies were part of the first curriculum at Harvard when it opened in 1636. Here are some institutional dates:

1728
Isaac Greenwood is the first Hollis Professor Of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy

1738
John Winthrop succeeds Greenwood as Hollis Professor

1780
Williams succeeds Winthrop as Hollis Professor

1789
Samuel Webber (A.B. 1784) succeeds Williams as Hollis Professor

1807
John Farrar succeeds Webber as Hollis Professor

1816
Jacob Bigelow is the first Rumford Professor of Physics

1833-1834
Department of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy under the superintendence of Benjamin Pierce

1834
Daniel Treadwell succeeds Bigelow as Rumford Professor

1836-1837
Benjamin Pierce becomes University Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. He is head of the Dept. and assisted by Joseph Lovering

1837-1838
Mathematics and Natural Philosophy become two separate Departments. The Department of Mathematics headed by Pierce and the Department of Natural Philosophy headed by Joseph Lovering

1838
Joseph Lovering succeeds Farrar as Hollis Professor

1840-1841
Department of Natural Philosophy becomes Department of Physics

1847
Lawrence Scientific School established

1847
Eben Norton Horsford succeeds Treadwell as the Rumford Professor

1863
Wolcott Gibbs succeeds Horsford as Rumford Professor

1871-1872
A physical laboratory in set up in Harvard Hall under the charge of Assistant Professors John Trowbridge and George Hill

1884
Jefferson Physical Laboratory opens; Lovering is its first director

1888
Benjamin Osgood Peirce succeeds Lovering as Hollis Professor

1888
Trowbridge succeeds Lovering as Director of the Jefferson Physical Laboratory and succeeds Gibbs as Rumford Professor

1892
the Department of Physics employs George Thompson as its first skilled machinist

1906
the Graduate School of Applied Science established; Wallace Clement Sabine is Dean

1910
Theodore Lyman succeeds Trowbridge as Director of the Jefferson Physical Laboratory

1912
the Graduate Schools of Applied Science supersede the Graduate School of Applied Science; Sabine continues as Dean

1914
Agreement is reached between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard results in closure of Graduate Schools of Applied Science

1914
Sabine succeeds Peirce as Hollis Professor

1914
Edwin Herbert Hall succeeds Trowbridge as Rumford Professor

1915
Cruft laboratory opens under the direction of George Washington Pierce and Emory L. Chaffee

1917
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts dissolves the cooperative agreement between MIT and Harvard

1917-1918
Activities of the Department relate to World War I

1918
the Harvard Engineering School is established

1921
Theodore Lyman succeeds as Hollis Professor

1921
George Washington Pierce succeeds Hall as Rumford Professor

1926
Frederick A. Saunders Chairman of the Department

1926
Percy Williams Bridgman succeeds Lyman as Hollis Professor

1931
Research Laboratory of Physics completed; Lyman is its first director

1932
the Harvard Engineering School is superceded by the Graduate and Undergraduate Schools of Engineering

1938
Cyclotron constructed

1940
Emory Leon Chaffee succeeds Pierce as Rumford Professor

1940
Edwin C. Kemble Chairman of the Department

1940
Efforts related to World War II begin

1940
Electro-Acoustic Laboratory established and directed by Dr. L.L. Beranek

1941
Underwater Sound Laboratory established and directed by Prof. F.V. Hunt

1942
Radio Research Laboratory established

1943
Cyclotron requisitioned by the Manhattan Project; Prof. Kenneth T. Bainbridge is recruited by the government to work at Los Alamos

1944
J.H. Van Vleck Chairman of the Department

1945
Roger W. Hickman appointed Associate Director of the Physics Laboratories

1947
Hickman succeeds Lyman as Director of the Physics Laboratories

1947
Research Laboratory of Physics renamed the Lyman Laboratory of Physics

1948
Otto Oldenberg Chairman of the Department

1949
Synchrocyclotron and Nuclear Laboratory open

1949
The Graduate School of Engineering merges with the Faculty of Arts and Sciences to create the Division of Engineering Sciences

1950
Low temperature laboratory completed

1951
John Hasbrouck Van Vleck succeeds Bridgman as Hollis Professor

1951
the Division of Engineering Sciences renamed the Division of Applied Science

1952
Kenneth T. Bainbridge Chairman of the Department

1953
Frederick Vinton Hunt succeeds Chaffee as Rumford professor

1955
J.C. Street Chairman of the Department

1955
Division of Applied Science renamed the Division of Engineering and Applied Physics

1959
W. M. Preston Chairman of the Department

1960
J.C. Street Acting Chairman of the Department

1962
Cambridge Electron Accelerator is operational

1965
Wendell H. Furry Chairman of the Department

1966
W. M. Preston succeeds Hickman as Director of the Physics Laboratories

1968
R.V. Pound Chairman of the Department

1969
Andrea Mattei Gleason succeeds Van Vleck as Hollis Professor

1972
Paul C. Martin Chairman of the Department

1972-1973
Work at theCambridge Electron Accelerator comes to an end

1973
Completion of the Science Center

1974
Nicolaas Bloembergen succeeds Hunt as Rumford Professor

1975
Michael Tinkham Chairman of the Department

1975
Robert V. Pound succeeds Preston as Director of the Physics Laboratories

1977
the Division of Engineering and Applied Physics renamed the Division of Applied Sciences

1978
Karl Strauch as Chairman of the Department

1980
Michael Tinkham succeeds Bloembergen as Rumford Professor

1983
Prof. Costas Papaliolios Director of the Physics Laboratories

1982
Richard Wilson Chairman of the Department

1984
Ronald C. Vanelli appointed Director of the Physics Laboratories

1985
Francis M. Pipkin Chairman of the Department

1988
Bertrand I. Halperin Chairman of the Department

1989
Margaret Law succeeds Vanelli as Director of the Physics Laboratories

1991
Howard Georgi Chairman of the Department.

1992
Bertrand I. Halperin succeeds Gleason as Hollis Professor

1994
Gary J. Feldman Chairman of the Department

1997
the Division of Applied Sciences renamed the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences

1997
David P. Nelson Chairman of the Department

1999
Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory celebrated its 50th anniversary

2002 June 2
Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory was shut down at 9:00 am
Terms
  • United States
  • Cambridge
For more information, please see this finding aid from the University Archives, "Harvard University. Department of Physics. Records of the Harvard University Department of Physics : an inventory,"  Harvard University Archives, http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/deepLink?_collection=oasis&uniqueId=hua01999 (accessed 09/10/2014)
"Early History of the Department," Department of Physics, Harvard University, http://www.physics.harvard.edu/ (accessed 09/10/2014)
Physical Laboratory Manual
Unpublished examinations in physics -- electromagnetism

facebook iconTwitter Logo

_______________________________
Join Our Mailing List I Contact
_______________________________
The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments
Science Center, Room 371 • 1 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138 •chsi@fas.harvard.edu
p. 617-495-2779 •
f. 617-496-5794
_______________________________
The CHSI is one of the

HMSC Logo

Exhibition Hours

The Putnam Gallery
(Science Center 136):
Monday through Friday, 11a.m. to 4p.m.


The Special Exhibitions Gallery
(Science Center 251):
Monday through Friday, 9a.m. to 5p.m.


The Foyer Gallery
Closed for Installation.

All galleries are closed on University Holidays.

Admission is free of charge.
Children must be escorted by an adult.

Admin Login
OpenScholar
Copyright © 2017 The President and Fellows of Harvard College | Privacy | Accessibility | Report Copyright Infringement