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Grace Murray Hopper Collection

National Museum of American History

Object Details

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
See more items in
Grace Murray Hopper Collection
Summary
Papers and photographs of Grace Murray Hopper (1906-1992) computer and Naval pioneer.
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
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.
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.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1562729477047-1562729477068-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8a1e4e5a0-fbd1-4ece-ad0c-dd83803a6168

In the Collection

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  • Electrons Trained At Harvard Lab: Research Expert is Developing New Super-Calculator Recording Device, John Lynch, Boston Traveler, Friday, 10 January 1947. Photo: Harrison W. Fuller and Numeroscope Fuller and Numeroscope description.

  • (66) One of the Specialists and his wife (?) about 1945 or 1946 in folder marked "The LATIN QUARTER, Winchester Street, Boston, Mass." taken by Club Photo Service, Winchester St. Boston 16, Mass. Tel., Hancock 2859

  • Electronic 'Brain' Computes 100-Year Problem in 2 Hours, 15 February 1946 (? paper); ENIAC, set-up, compare with MIT differential analyzer.

  • (1) Campbell with typewriter

  • (80) At the dedication of the Computation Laboratory L to R: Rear Admiral W.D. Baker, Commander of the U.S. Naval Base in Boston; Grace Hopper; Capt. A.M. Van Eaton, wartime commander of Fargo Barracks in Boston similar, but not the same picture published in the Christian Science Monitor Tuesday, 7 January 1947.

  • Volume XIV, No. 7 July, 1950 (2 copies) "Electronic Actuary: How UNIVAC, Remington Rand's new high-speed computing system, is being applied successfully to the complicated problems of life insurance policies and studies." by Dr. Grace M. Hopper as told to Marika Hellstrom (pages 10, 29).

  • Glossary of Automatic Programming Terms (2 copies).

  • Operating Instructions for Problem J., typewritten by H.A. Arnold.

  • Volume XVI, No. 12, December, 1952 "UNIVAC Beats Statisticians on Election Night" by A.C. Hancock (pages 4-5).

  • Report Card of Grace Murray Hopper, 8 June 1950) "Tact -A+++++ * *Spoke very nicely to Dresch".

  • (70) Construction of the Computation Laboratory basement complete, walls built up higher than previous picture, frames being laid for pouring the first floor, area is better policed; the wet concrete is dry

  • Calculator at Harvard Solves Navy Problems" The Christian Science Monitor, 7 August 1944, picture of Aiken with calculator.

  • (52) A rest stop on the trip L to R: Aiken, Calvin, Bissell and Bloch after each other, Campbell holding his wife's arm, Arnold looking on, Livingston beside Campbell, Lt. from Dahlgren by door of bus, White on other side of door, Hopper in doorway

  • Mark I Manual, notes on coding,

  • Conant Accepts I.B.M. Calculator: High Navy Officers Witness Title Transfer: Mathematical Robot to Help University Research, p. 1-2 pictures: tape punch, Hopper and White with sequence mechanism, Aiken and Hopper with interpolator, Bloch with calculator.

  • DP DEFINITIONS by W.S. Roth (page 81) ACM(?) year(?) included such as: "DEBUGGING--Removing the needles from the haystack." "MEMORY DUMP --Amnesia."

  • (40) The ball game: Hawkins as catcher, White at bat

  • Computation Laboratory Dedicated at Harvard Christian Science Monitor

  • Table of Contents Newspaper Clippings Given by Grace Hopper, 3 Pages

  • Mathematical Robot, Time, 14 August 1944, picture Aiken with tape and Mark I topic: Science.

  • Mark I plugging manual

  • Conscience and the Machine editorial, New York Herald Tribune, Friday, 10 January 1947, (2 copies p. 18); Wiener, military use of scientific developments.

  • Demonstration problem flowchart,

  • III Random normal deviates in units of standard errors

  • New Computer Lightning Fast: Army Call It the World's Best Calculator, The New York Sun, Friday, 15 February 1946 (AP p. 1); second section, ENIAC announcement to the press.

  • Two Year's Work in Five Minutes: That's what BINAC can do!

  • (46) Bus parked in backyard of Grace Hopper's parents country home in New Hampshire ? furthest right, Aiken bending

  • Forecast of the Future editorial, Herald Tribune, 12 January 1947 (handwritten) analysis of economics by computers forecast.

  • Original UNIVAC Printout of Election '52 Prediction "It's awfully early, but I'll go out on a limb. UNIVAC predicts --with 3,398,745 votes in --Stevenson Eisenhower. The chances are now 100 to 1 in favor of the election of Eisenhower."; in blue ink, "property of Grace M. Hopper".

  • I Random sequences of digits

  • (73) The Computation Lab as it stood complete Fall, 1946

  • Computer Unit Sold To Remington Rand, New York Times, 2 March 1950; sale of Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corp. to Remington Rand.

  • (47) Bus parked in backyard of Hopper's parents country home in New Hampshire. Mr. and Mrs. Murray (her parents) are the two furthest right sitting in chairs

  • Memo to Mr. J.P. Eckert, Jr. from Miss Betty Snyder. Subject: Table of Percents of Total UNIVAC Time Utilized by Various Operations, DP-16; Code C-10

  • Mark II coding sheets (1) Problem Sheet PRNC-NPG-68 (Rev. 12-49) Navy-DPPO PRNC, WASH., D.C. (4 copies) could do 30 lines of coding (2) an earlier version of the coding sheet (1 copy) could do 60 lines of coding

  • If Robots Run the Works

  • (12) Lt. Hopper and Spec. White examining sequence mechanism, pre-August 1944; also clipping of same form: Harvard Crimson Service News, 8 August 1944.

  • (45) To launch the canoes or go in swimming? L to R: Ruth Knowlton in dark bathing suit Verdonck, Aiken, Hopper in light bathing suit, Lt. from Dahlgren

  • Cartoon by Grace Hopper: graph paper, three-hole punched "I am elusive" This way to the buss via Out Relay.

  • (36) Relays

  • (30) Right wing of Calculator: tape-readers and tape-punches

  • (21) Sequence Mechanism: interior view

  • Code Card UNIVAC I: original code card Grace Hopper developed; Copyright 1951 by EMCC; List of Instructions, UNIVAC Pulse Code.

  • UNIVAC Fac-Tronic System by Remington Rand, Inc., Eckert-Mauchly Division (18 pages) post-31 March 1951.

  • Sympathy Chit (3 x 5 file card) signed by I.M. BROADSHOULDERED, LT (j.g.), USNR, Chaplain Striker.

  • (20) Mark I from constant switches towards typewriters,

  • Current Developments in Common Language Programming for Business Data Systems

  • Think Machine" under picture of Hopper with tape punch, Newsweek

  • The Education of a Computer, Dr. Grace Murray Hopper. Presented at the meetings of the Association for Computing Machinery 2-3 May 1952.

  • New York Times, special to dateline August 6th.

  • Proposed 7 pulse code for UNIVAC with odd checking pulse, Code C-10 by F.E.S. (Frances Elizabeth Snyder)

  • (30) Cheers!" L to R: Bloch at piano, Aiken, Hopper, Brendel, Campbell (4 copies).

  • (71) Aiken between two men on the loading platform of the nearly complete Computation Laboratory, October 1946

  • Programming UNIVAC Fac-tronic Systems, Manual I

  • Huge Mechanical Brain Operated at Unveiling, 8 January 1947, (INS) Mark II.

  • New Vistas in Post-War Science Research Seen in Debut of Computation Lab Today

  • Harvard Opens Laboratory for Computation: Hopes to Use Mechanical Brain to Solve Problems of All Social Sciences, Stephen White, New York Times(?) 29 December 1946: new Comp Lab, uses of calculators.

  • (13) Interpolators

  • Program of Association for Computing Machinery: Oak Ridge, Tennessee

  • Mark III: Number transfer circuits

  • (22) Calvin and Bissell in back of a house,

  • (83) Lt. Commander Joseph O. Harrison, Jr., going over diagrams for the Mark III (?)

  • Volume XIV, No. 8, August, 1950 "Solving engineering problems fast by UNIVAC", by Dr. John W. Mauchly (pages 20-21).

  • Operating instructions, Problem L,

  • (57) In the machine shop 27 September 1945. L to R: Porter, ? , Hourihan, Huntsberger

  • Exhibit F, Second Workshop on UNIVAC Automatic Programming, The Pentagon

  • (62) Ensign Brendel with the sequence mechanism, 1945 or 1946

  • Dr. Bush Honored for Public Service: Atom Bomb Scientist Gets Hoover Medal -Sees Better Life Through Research, New York Times, Friday, 31 January 1947. Photo: Bush (page C5). Bush gets Hoover Medal of American Institute of Electrical Engineers.

  • (14) 8 January 1948 Functional Tape Preparation Unit

  • Powers of two 1-70

  • A Mathematical Robot With All the Answers Philadelphia Inquirer, 20 August 1944. Aiken with Mark I, Hopper with tape punch, White with sequence mechanism.

  • Matrix Multiplication Routine for the BINAC,

  • Mechanical 'Memory' Test In Symposium at Harvard, Herbert B. Nichols, Christian Science Monitor, 8 January 1947, (p. 3.); discussion of 'memory' in calculating machines at 47 Symposium.

  • (60) Working on the plugging and backboard wiring of the Mark II, 5 June 1946

  • Exhibit D, Compiling Routines

  • Matrix Algebra on the BINAC

  • Electric Brain Solves Functions, Interpolation, Differentials, Trig: Auto Circuits Work For BuShip in War p. 1-2 picture: Campbell and Verdonck (?) setting constants.

  • IBM pamphlet, IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator. Program for A Symposium of Large Scale Digital Calculating Machinery,

  • Reprints of "The Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator" by Aiken and Hopper, I and II.

  • (48) Setting off on the bus at Harvard, L to R: Bloch, Aiken, Calvin (?), Lt. from Dahlgren, Arnold, Campbell, Bissell

  • (39) Test Program Panel

  • Common Business Languages for ADP --A Progress Report, in John Diebold + Associates, Inc. Newsleter, Vol. IV, No. 10 October 5, 1959: on top of first sheet, "Automatic Programming.

  • Technical Writing, by Joseph D. Chapline, Jr.: copyright 1950 by J.P. Chapline, Jr., First Prize Billin Award Contest, 1950, Engineers' Club, Philadelphia: 8 pages, pamphlet.

  • Problem L Coding final draft by Hopper

  • M.I.T. Scientist 'Rebels' At War Research Talk: Wiener Cites Moral Issue in Use of Discoveries Against Civilians, Sara White Boston Traveler, Wednesday, 8 January 1947 (page 1, 12); part of text of letter to Atlantic Monthly entitled "A Scientist Rebels".

  • Harvard Unveils Huge Calculator

  • "The ENIAC, An Electronic Computing Machine", by Professor D. R. Hartree. Published by Nature, volume 158. 7 pages.

  • Exhibit K, The A-2 Compiler System: Operations Manual. Copyright 1953 by Remington Rand, Inc.

  • Electronic Calculator Delivered to Bureau of Census: Science and Industry Are Aided By New Electronic Calculators Edwin L. Dale, Jr., New York Herald Tribune, 5 August 1951 Uses of Computers, UNIVAC, REAC, IBM, Photos: 1st UNIVAC to Bureau of Census, 200th REAC off assembly line.

  • Systems for Modern Management

  • (68) Plan for the Basement of the Computation Laboratory

  • Volume XVII, No. 7 July, 1953, "Computing the Nation's Potential" by H. Burke Horton (pages 16-17).

  • Exhibit H, Letter to Dr. Grace Hopper from Emil D. Schell, Chief, Mathematical Computation Branch, AFAPA-3B, DCS/Comptroller, Hq USAF, Washington 25, D.C.

  • Photographs of MARK II

  • UNIVAC Instruction Code C-10,

  • Unknown Chart/Grid, Features Binary, Numerals, Letters, and Symbols

  • (34) Tape Reader and Tape Punch

  • Report No. 27, Bureau of Ordnance Computation Project, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

  • 2 eye-fillers go well together!

  • Exhibit G, Letter to Dr. Grace Hopper from Elmore G. Lawton, LTC, CE Army Map Service, Washington, D.C.

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Grace Murray Hopper Collection
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