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WALTER GORDON WHITMAN
1895-1974
BY BRUCE S. OLD
W ALTER GORDON WHITMAN, Professor Emeritus and former
Head of the Chemical Engineering Department at the Mas-
sachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and a science advisor to
the top levels of the State Department, the Department of Defense,
and the United Nations, died at the age of seventy-eight in
Scottsdale, Arizona, on April 6, 1974.
Professor Whitman was born November 30, 1895, in Winthrop,
Massachusetts. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in chemi-
cal engineering at MIT in 1917 and a Master of Science degree in
1920. Subsequently, he was awarded honorary Doctor of Science
degrees by Northeastern University in 1954, by Centre College in
1956, and by the University of Pennsylvania in 1956.
Following his graduation from MIT, Whitman remained on the
staff as Instructor and Assistant Professor until 1926. During that
time he made significant contributions to the theory of gas absorp-
tion, developing the "Whitman Two-film Theory of Absorption."
Whitman left MIT in 1926 to join Standard Oil of Indiana, where
he rose to become Associate Director of Research. During this
period he naiads important contributions to the prevention of
corrosion in refineries and to the fundamentals of the cracking of
oils.
In 1934 Whitman returned to MIT to become Professor and
Head of the Department of Chemical Engineering. He kept this
position for twenty-seven years, during which time he made signifi-
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cant contributions to engineering education. During this period the
department grew in stature and was generally rated the best in the
world. He was elected President of the American Institute of
Chemical Engineers in 1956 and was presented the Founders
Award of the Institute in 1960. He was a Member of the American
Chemical Society, an Honorary Member of the American Institute
of Chemists, a Councilor of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, and a Fellow of the American Philosophical Society.
During his long tenure at MIT, Walter Whitman was much sought
after to serve his country in important positions. During World
War II he served as Director of the Basic Chemicals Division, War
Production Board. Also, he acted as Chairman of the Subcommit-
tee on Aircraft Fuels and Lubricants of the National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics, chaired the so-called Whitman Com-
mittee on the status of jet propulsion, and was a Member of the
U.S.-Canadian Ordnance Committee on Production of Explosives.
He returned to MIT in 1948.
Returning to Washington on leave of absence from MIT, Profes-
sor Whitman was appointed to the General Advisory Committee of
the U.S. Atomic Energy Committee, remaining a Member from
1950 to 1956. In addition, he served the Department of Defense as
Chairman of the Research and Development Board from 1951 to
1953.
In 1955 Professor Whitman was appointed by United Nations
Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold to the position of Secretary
General of the United Nations Conference on Peaceful Uses of
Atomic Energy. The Conference was held in Geneva, and it was
unique in that some 3,000 representatives from both sides of the
Iron Curtain came together, presented about 1,000 papers, and
cooperated wholeheartedly in making the conference a success.
The successful outcome of the conference was due to the consum-
mate skill with which it was organized and conducted. The out-
standing part played by Professor Whitman prompted the U.S.
Delegate to the Conference, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, to mention on
her radio program that he should be considered as a candidate for
the Nobel Peace Prize.
As a result of Professor Whitman's many contributions toward
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international understanding in science and engineering, on Sep-
tember 4, 1960, Secretary of State Christian A. Herter appointed
him to the position of Science Advisor. He held this pioneering
position in the State Department under the Eisenhower and Ken-
nedy administrations until June 1962.
Obviously, Walter G. Whitman was a very rare individual, com-
bining numerous theoretical engineering contributions, as demon-
strated in his many research publications and innovative industrial
and educational advancements with superb administrative skills.
He provided outstanding leadership to numerous and varied U.S.
Government and United Nations studies of many critical scientific
and technological problem areas. For all of these many technologi-
cally based contributions to industry, government, and university
sectors, Whitman was elected to membership in the National
Academy of Engineering in 1973.
The leadership characteristics exhibited by Walter Whitman
stemmed from his engineering training and knowledge? his quiet,
good-humored, and effective administrative skills, and his broad
interests in the social-economic progress of all peoples.
Indeed, it was a great privilege to have had so rare and broad an
intellect within the membership of the Academy.
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