Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Bart Hall's avatar

Here's one example. Just one. My father (1916-2002) had three years of college, in chemistry. The day after Pearl Harbor he and his brother were down at the recruiting station. They turned Dad down because as a chemist he was "too valuable at home". He would have none of it, and eventually browbeat his way into the Navy, becoming an officer.

He taught himself radio and radar, and at Iwo Jima radioed the lead unit assaulting Suribachi to "grab the biggest damned piece of sheet metal you can find, and carry it right up front." He then deployed the radar fire-control system to walk his destroyer's 5-inch shells up the mountain, only yards ahead of the Marines. Figured it on the go. There were thousand like him.

After the war, he became a self-taught engineer, eventually getting his P.Eng. licence in both electrical and mechanical engineering. He specialised in metals -- alloys, corrosion, plating, and so on. Back in 1963 he got a panicked phone call from a competing company. They had a process tank full of phosgene [one of the most poisonous things there is] at 3000 psi for which the corrosion monitors no longer were reporting.

He caught the overnight train to Cleveland, and by Xray determined that 2 inches of nickel steel had corroded to 5/8 inch. It was days away from a pressure-failure explosion, directly upwind of Cleveland.

When he got home, he pulled me out of school and we spent days at the nearby Yale library. I was doing the preliminary skimming, and handing him the potentially useful journals and texts. Within 30 days he had invented a totally new alloy which would not corrode under those conditions.

He refused to patent it, and instead telegrammed every chemical company using high-pressure phosgene in the US, Canada, Australia, and Europe ... warning them of the problem and giving them the needed new-alloy specs.

America was then full of men and women like him, and I, too, wonder why such people are so depressingly scarce in these current times. Dad certainly didn't have more formal eduction or credentials than folks today, but his generation always found ways to get shit done.

Expand full comment
Denver Gregg's avatar

This will get me branded as an extremist ofc, but i've been in the workforce since the early 80s and these observations are built on copious experience. Workplaces where men are the majority tend to be crunchy. Workplaces where women are the majority don't. Workplaces with a critical mass of out-of-the closet deviants (5% or so) are the soggiest of all.

Expand full comment
55 more comments...

No posts