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Nelson M. Cooke

Nelson Magor Cooke (28 November 1903 – 30 November 1965) was a leader in developing electronic schools of the United States Navy, the recipient of the Navy Commendation Medal and Medal for Humane Action, a post-war engineering entrepreneur, and an author of books on applied mathematics and basic electronics.

Nelson Magor Cooke
Born(1903-11-28)November 28, 1903
Davis City, Iowa
DiedNovember 30, 1965(1965-11-30) (aged 62)
Bethesda, Maryland
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Navy
Years of service1920–1951
Rank Lieutenant commander
Awards
Other workEntrepreneur, author

Cooke was born in Davis City, Iowa, son of Jacob and Lena Stoneburner Cook. Orphaned at 12, he was raised by relatives. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy as an Apprentice Seaman on 22 November 1920, and progressively rose in rank through Petty Officer and Warrant Officer to Lieutenant Commander before retiring on 1 May 1951. After leaving the Navy, he formed and operated his own engineering firm. Cooke began professional writing in 1934, and continued with multiple-edition technical books throughout his life. He was married to Catherine Elizabeth Rice of Washington, DC, in 1926; they had one daughter, Isabelle E. Cooke, born in 1931. Nelson Magor Cooke died of leukemia at the Bethesda Naval Hospital in November 1965; his home at that time was in Great Falls, Virginia.

United States Navy

As a youth, Cooke's primary interest was in the emerging radio technology. Without funds for studying engineering at a university, he turned to the Navy for obtaining a technical education and entered military service at age 16. Through on-the-job training and independent study (called “striking for rate”), he attained the Petty Officer rating of Electrician's Mate in minimum time. (During the 1920s and 1930s, technicians with this rating were responsible for radio maintenance.)

Training in Navy schools

After passing a rigorous admission examination, in 1928 Cooke attended the six-month Radio Materiel School (RMS) at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) in Bellevue, District of Columbia. His performance at the RMS was such that on 16 October 1928, he received a Warrant Officer appointment as a Radio Electrician, one of the youngest persons ever to receive such appointment. His first assignment after receiving this appointment was on a seaplane tender, the USS Wright (AV-1), where he served for six years.

In 1934, Cooke attended the Warrant Officer's Radio Engineering School (RES), also located on the NRL campus. Upon graduating, Cooke was promoted to Chief Radio Electrician (the highest level Warrant Officer) on 18 October 1934. He then returned to the Wright and a year later was transferred to the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga (CV-3).[1]

Instructor in Navy schools

In July 1938, Cooke was assigned to the staff of the Radio Engineering School; here he served four years as the Senior Instructor and also as a special advisor and lecturer at the companion RMS. During this time, he developed an extensive set of lecture notes that, published by McGraw-Hill, became his first full book.[2] Cooke also developed a special slide rule that, with an extensive instruction manual, was manufactured and sold commercially by Keuffel and Esser, the primary supplier of engineering slide rules. The Cooke Radio Slide Rule had a 2π scale that was useful in many electrical calculations.[3]

Electronics Training Program

During the final weeks of 1941, Cooke served on an ad hoc committee formed by the Personnel Division of the Bureau of Navigation (BuNav, then responsible for all training in the Navy) seeking a solution to the crisis in training electronic technicians. The Navy had, or had in production planning, hundred of ships with advanced electronics (radar, sonar, and high-frequency communications), but qualified personnel for maintenance were almost non-existent. It was agreed that persons with an electrical engineering (EE) degree, or at least were graduates of the Warrant Officer's RES, would best fill this need, but they were unavailable in the numbers needed (BuPers was projecting needs in the tens of thousands).

The ad hoc committee, coordinated by William C. Eddy and with Cooke, several other leaders from existing schools, and BuNav training specialists as members, developed plans for a training program that would, in 10 months of 12-hour study days, cover all of the key topics in a normal college EE curriculum, as well as having laboratories involving the most current hardware. This activity, commonly called the Electronics Training Program (ETP), was approved by BuPers and initiated in mid-January 1942. To identify personnel potentially capable of being successful in such intensive training, a selection test (commonly called the Eddy Test) was devised. In a published paper by Cooke, it was noted that persons passing the test had an average of 1.5 years of prior college and were in the top two percent on the intelligence-quotient scale.[4] In its entirety, the ETP was conducted across the Nation and continued until the end of the war. Of the estimated 500,000 persons who took the Eddy Test, only about 30,000 passed, entered the Navy or Marine Corps, and eventually graduated from the ETP.[5]

The ETP had a Primary School (officially called EE&RM) and a Secondary School (officially called Advanced RMS). Primary School was mainly given by six engineering colleges across the Nation and, in three months, covered all topics normally in the first two years of an EE curriculum. The Secondary School was given at four Naval facilities, including the RMS Bellevue. For completeness, Bellevue also initially gave a Primary School, and on 15 August 1942, Cooke was commissioned a Lieutenant (jg), and made the Officer-in-Charge of the Bellevue Primary School. He served in this position until May 1943; he was then promoted to Lieutenant and named the Executive Officer of the overall RMS Bellevue. One of his first actions was to transfer the Bellevue Primary School to a college, thus making space for greatly increasing the size of the Secondary School. Further promoted to Lieutenant Commander on 3 October 1945, he remained the leader of RMS Bellevue until late 1946; at that time, the activities were transferred to the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes.

For service during his tour of duty at the NRL-RMS, Cooke received a Letter of Commendation from the Secretary of the Navy, with authorization to wear the Commendation Medal. The citation includes the following:

For exceptional meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding service to the United States Department of the Navy as the leader of the electronics training school at the Naval Research Laboratory, Lieutenant Commander Cooke contributed materially to the successful prosecution of the war against the enemy.[6]

Soviet Blockade of Berlin

In February 1947, Cooke was assigned to the Staff of Commander, U.S. Naval Forces, Germany, as Assistant Technical Officer (Electronics and Aeronautics). Between June 1948 and May 1949, he was responsible for radio communications in the airlift during the Berlin Blockade, for which he was awarded the Medal for Humane Action. In August 1949, Cooke was assigned to the Bureau of Ships in Washington, D.C., where he headed the Installation Engineering Section until his retirement on 1 May 1951.[7]

Entrepreneur: Cooke Engineering Company

In mid-1951, Cooke established Cooke Engineering Company in Alexandria, Virginia. After operating as a sole-proprietorship firm for 10 years, he took the company public.[8] Cooke Engineering also had an operation in San Mateo, California. After Cooke's death, the firm was acquired by Dynatech Corporation in 1968.

Under Government contracts, Cooke Engineering engaged in providing engineering services and in developing and manufacturing electronic products. Representative work included analysis of factors affecting naval shore communication stations,[9] effects of radiation from buried cables,[10] and electromagnetic coupling between power and control cables.[11] Cooke's Manufactured products included power supplies, amplifiers, and patch panels.[12]

Cooke also formed a Medical Research Division that designed and built microtitration devices (microplates) that were widely used in virological, serological, and immunological laboratory analysis.[13]

Technical book author

Although lacking a college education, Cooke, through self-study and Navy schools, had acquired considerable mathematical and technical knowledge and a skill for writing about complex subjects in a very readable manner. His publisher, McGraw-Hill, in a 1962 catalog, stated:

Nelson M. Cooke's 1942 book on applied mathematics, Mathematics for Radiomen and Electricians, remains unsurpassed for providing clearly understandable material for radio technicians, and his new book, Basic Mathematics for Electronics based on this earlier masterpiece, is equally of value for the technical college classroom.[14]

Cooke began his experience as a writer in 1934, co-authoring “Preparation for Candidates, Radio Materiel School,” a manual published by the Naval Research Laboratory. His notes as an instructor at the Radio Materiel School and the Warrant Officer's Radio Engineering School were published as Mathematics for Electricians and Radiomen by McGraw-Hill in 1942; widely used as a textbook during the war years, this remains in the reference domain today. After designing a new slide rule for Keuffel and Essel (K&E) in 1942, he wrote the detailed booklet, “Instruction Manual for the 4139 Cooke Radio Slide Rule.”

Cooke's first book specifically for the public was Mathematics Essential to Radio and Electronics: Including Principles of Direct-Current and Alternating-Current Circuits; co-authored by Joseph Orleans; it was published by McGraw-Hill in 1943. Cooke also began a relationship with the Allied Radio Corporation in 1943, editing the "Radio Data Handbook: A Compilation of Formulas and Data Commonly Used in the Field of Radio and Electronics"; this very popular publication ultimately went through 16 editions.[15]

In 1945, Cooke teamed with John Marcus, editor of the magazine Electronics, to compile the Electronics Dictionary, published by McGraw-Hill in four editions. A similar book, also co-authored by Marcus, was Electronics and Nucleonics Dictionary, published by McGraw-Hill in 1960.

As an outgrowth of his book Mathematics for Electricians and Radiomen, Cooke wrote Basic Mathematics for Electronics, first published by McGraw Hill in 1960. This became a popular textbook in technical schools and was later revised by Herbert Adams and several associate authors through seven editions, the last in 1992. In a recent history of McGraw-Hill, the success of this book is singled out, stating that it had total sales in excess of 485,000 copies.[16] Cooke and Adams also co-authored Arithmetic Review for Electronics, published by McGraw-Hill in 1968, after Cooke's death.

References

  1. ^ ”Biography: Lieutenant Commander Nelson M. Cooke,” Office of Information, Internal Relations Division, U.S. Navy, 17 August 1967
  2. ^ Cooke, Nelson M.; Mathematics for Electricians and Radiomen, McGraw-Hill, 1942
  3. ^ K&E Type 4139 Duplex; http://www.mccoys-kecatalogs.com/KEModels/ke4139family.htm
  4. ^ Cooke, Nelson M.; “Mathematics for Electricity and Radio," invited paper, Mathematics-Science Panel of the New York Society for the Experimental Study of Education, 23 March 1943. Published in The Mathematics Teacher, vol. 36, Dec. 1943, pp. 329-332
  5. ^ Watson, Raymond C. Jr.; Solving the Naval Radar Crisis: The Eddy Test – Admission to the Most Challenging Training Program of World War II, Trafford Publishing, 2007, ISBN 978-1-4251-6173-6
  6. ^ Letter of Commendation. From the Secretary of the Navy, 10 Oct. 1945, Service Record. Nelson Mangor Cooke, U.S. Navy
  7. ^ Biography, U.S. Navy, op. cit.
  8. ^ ”Cooke Engineering Files for Stock Offering,” Securities and Exchange Stock Digest, 13 Sept. 1961; https://www.sec.gov/news/digest/1961/dig091361.pdf
  9. ^ ”Handbook of Naval Shore Station Criteria,” Cooke Engineering Company, Dec. 1956; http://www.virhistory.com/navy/manuals/92675/92675-00.pdf
  10. ^ ”Buried Cable Radiation Study, Cooke Engineering Company, Defense Technical Documentation Center, 1959
  11. ^ ”Power Line Induction Harmonic Tests,” Cooke Engineering Company, Defense Technical Documentation Center,1961
  12. ^ ”Multi-circuit Switching Connector,” Cooke Engineering Company; http://www.ptodirect.com/Results/Patents?query=PN/3665129
  13. ^ ”The Microtiter System,” Cooke Medical Research; http://jimmunol.org/content/88/3/local/advertising.pdf
  14. ^ "Books for Technology," McGraw Hill Book Company, Catalog, 1962
  15. ^ "Radio Data Handbook," Allied Radio Corp., fourth edition, 1947; http://www.repeater-builder.com/tech-info/pdfs/allied-data-handbook-4th.pdf
  16. ^ McGraw-Hill Incorporate Company Profile, 2011: http://www.answers.com/topic/the-mcgraw-hill-companies-inc#ixzz1x8uyHZqo

External links

nelson, cooke, nelson, magor, cooke, november, 1903, november, 1965, leader, developing, electronic, schools, united, states, navy, recipient, navy, commendation, medal, medal, humane, action, post, engineering, entrepreneur, author, books, applied, mathematic. Nelson Magor Cooke 28 November 1903 30 November 1965 was a leader in developing electronic schools of the United States Navy the recipient of the Navy Commendation Medal and Medal for Humane Action a post war engineering entrepreneur and an author of books on applied mathematics and basic electronics Nelson Magor CookeBorn 1903 11 28 November 28 1903Davis City IowaDiedNovember 30 1965 1965 11 30 aged 62 Bethesda MarylandAllegiance United States of AmericaService wbr branch United States NavyYears of service1920 1951RankLieutenant commanderAwardsCommendation Medal Medal for Humane ActionOther workEntrepreneur authorCooke was born in Davis City Iowa son of Jacob and Lena Stoneburner Cook Orphaned at 12 he was raised by relatives He enlisted in the U S Navy as an Apprentice Seaman on 22 November 1920 and progressively rose in rank through Petty Officer and Warrant Officer to Lieutenant Commander before retiring on 1 May 1951 After leaving the Navy he formed and operated his own engineering firm Cooke began professional writing in 1934 and continued with multiple edition technical books throughout his life He was married to Catherine Elizabeth Rice of Washington DC in 1926 they had one daughter Isabelle E Cooke born in 1931 Nelson Magor Cooke died of leukemia at the Bethesda Naval Hospital in November 1965 his home at that time was in Great Falls Virginia Contents 1 United States Navy 1 1 Training in Navy schools 1 2 Instructor in Navy schools 1 3 Electronics Training Program 1 4 Soviet Blockade of Berlin 2 Entrepreneur Cooke Engineering Company 3 Technical book author 4 References 5 External linksUnited States Navy EditAs a youth Cooke s primary interest was in the emerging radio technology Without funds for studying engineering at a university he turned to the Navy for obtaining a technical education and entered military service at age 16 Through on the job training and independent study called striking for rate he attained the Petty Officer rating of Electrician s Mate in minimum time During the 1920s and 1930s technicians with this rating were responsible for radio maintenance Training in Navy schools Edit After passing a rigorous admission examination in 1928 Cooke attended the six month Radio Materiel School RMS at the Naval Research Laboratory NRL in Bellevue District of Columbia His performance at the RMS was such that on 16 October 1928 he received a Warrant Officer appointment as a Radio Electrician one of the youngest persons ever to receive such appointment His first assignment after receiving this appointment was on a seaplane tender the USS Wright AV 1 where he served for six years In 1934 Cooke attended the Warrant Officer s Radio Engineering School RES also located on the NRL campus Upon graduating Cooke was promoted to Chief Radio Electrician the highest level Warrant Officer on 18 October 1934 He then returned to the Wright and a year later was transferred to the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga CV 3 1 Instructor in Navy schools Edit In July 1938 Cooke was assigned to the staff of the Radio Engineering School here he served four years as the Senior Instructor and also as a special advisor and lecturer at the companion RMS During this time he developed an extensive set of lecture notes that published by McGraw Hill became his first full book 2 Cooke also developed a special slide rule that with an extensive instruction manual was manufactured and sold commercially by Keuffel and Esser the primary supplier of engineering slide rules The Cooke Radio Slide Rule had a 2p scale that was useful in many electrical calculations 3 Electronics Training Program Edit During the final weeks of 1941 Cooke served on an ad hoc committee formed by the Personnel Division of the Bureau of Navigation BuNav then responsible for all training in the Navy seeking a solution to the crisis in training electronic technicians The Navy had or had in production planning hundred of ships with advanced electronics radar sonar and high frequency communications but qualified personnel for maintenance were almost non existent It was agreed that persons with an electrical engineering EE degree or at least were graduates of the Warrant Officer s RES would best fill this need but they were unavailable in the numbers needed BuPers was projecting needs in the tens of thousands The ad hoc committee coordinated by William C Eddy and with Cooke several other leaders from existing schools and BuNav training specialists as members developed plans for a training program that would in 10 months of 12 hour study days cover all of the key topics in a normal college EE curriculum as well as having laboratories involving the most current hardware This activity commonly called the Electronics Training Program ETP was approved by BuPers and initiated in mid January 1942 To identify personnel potentially capable of being successful in such intensive training a selection test commonly called the Eddy Test was devised In a published paper by Cooke it was noted that persons passing the test had an average of 1 5 years of prior college and were in the top two percent on the intelligence quotient scale 4 In its entirety the ETP was conducted across the Nation and continued until the end of the war Of the estimated 500 000 persons who took the Eddy Test only about 30 000 passed entered the Navy or Marine Corps and eventually graduated from the ETP 5 The ETP had a Primary School officially called EE amp RM and a Secondary School officially called Advanced RMS Primary School was mainly given by six engineering colleges across the Nation and in three months covered all topics normally in the first two years of an EE curriculum The Secondary School was given at four Naval facilities including the RMS Bellevue For completeness Bellevue also initially gave a Primary School and on 15 August 1942 Cooke was commissioned a Lieutenant jg and made the Officer in Charge of the Bellevue Primary School He served in this position until May 1943 he was then promoted to Lieutenant and named the Executive Officer of the overall RMS Bellevue One of his first actions was to transfer the Bellevue Primary School to a college thus making space for greatly increasing the size of the Secondary School Further promoted to Lieutenant Commander on 3 October 1945 he remained the leader of RMS Bellevue until late 1946 at that time the activities were transferred to the Naval Training Center Great Lakes For service during his tour of duty at the NRL RMS Cooke received a Letter of Commendation from the Secretary of the Navy with authorization to wear the Commendation Medal The citation includes the following For exceptional meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding service to the United States Department of the Navy as the leader of the electronics training school at the Naval Research Laboratory Lieutenant Commander Cooke contributed materially to the successful prosecution of the war against the enemy 6 Soviet Blockade of Berlin Edit In February 1947 Cooke was assigned to the Staff of Commander U S Naval Forces Germany as Assistant Technical Officer Electronics and Aeronautics Between June 1948 and May 1949 he was responsible for radio communications in the airlift during the Berlin Blockade for which he was awarded the Medal for Humane Action In August 1949 Cooke was assigned to the Bureau of Ships in Washington D C where he headed the Installation Engineering Section until his retirement on 1 May 1951 7 Entrepreneur Cooke Engineering Company EditIn mid 1951 Cooke established Cooke Engineering Company in Alexandria Virginia After operating as a sole proprietorship firm for 10 years he took the company public 8 Cooke Engineering also had an operation in San Mateo California After Cooke s death the firm was acquired by Dynatech Corporation in 1968 Under Government contracts Cooke Engineering engaged in providing engineering services and in developing and manufacturing electronic products Representative work included analysis of factors affecting naval shore communication stations 9 effects of radiation from buried cables 10 and electromagnetic coupling between power and control cables 11 Cooke s Manufactured products included power supplies amplifiers and patch panels 12 Cooke also formed a Medical Research Division that designed and built microtitration devices microplates that were widely used in virological serological and immunological laboratory analysis 13 Technical book author EditAlthough lacking a college education Cooke through self study and Navy schools had acquired considerable mathematical and technical knowledge and a skill for writing about complex subjects in a very readable manner His publisher McGraw Hill in a 1962 catalog stated Nelson M Cooke s 1942 book on applied mathematics Mathematics for Radiomen and Electricians remains unsurpassed for providing clearly understandable material for radio technicians and his new book Basic Mathematics for Electronics based on this earlier masterpiece is equally of value for the technical college classroom 14 Cooke began his experience as a writer in 1934 co authoring Preparation for Candidates Radio Materiel School a manual published by the Naval Research Laboratory His notes as an instructor at the Radio Materiel School and the Warrant Officer s Radio Engineering School were published as Mathematics for Electricians and Radiomen by McGraw Hill in 1942 widely used as a textbook during the war years this remains in the reference domain today After designing a new slide rule for Keuffel and Essel K amp E in 1942 he wrote the detailed booklet Instruction Manual for the 4139 Cooke Radio Slide Rule Cooke s first book specifically for the public was Mathematics Essential to Radio and Electronics Including Principles of Direct Current and Alternating Current Circuits co authored by Joseph Orleans it was published by McGraw Hill in 1943 Cooke also began a relationship with the Allied Radio Corporation in 1943 editing the Radio Data Handbook A Compilation of Formulas and Data Commonly Used in the Field of Radio and Electronics this very popular publication ultimately went through 16 editions 15 In 1945 Cooke teamed with John Marcus editor of the magazine Electronics to compile the Electronics Dictionary published by McGraw Hill in four editions A similar book also co authored by Marcus was Electronics and Nucleonics Dictionary published by McGraw Hill in 1960 As an outgrowth of his book Mathematics for Electricians and Radiomen Cooke wrote Basic Mathematics for Electronics first published by McGraw Hill in 1960 This became a popular textbook in technical schools and was later revised by Herbert Adams and several associate authors through seven editions the last in 1992 In a recent history of McGraw Hill the success of this book is singled out stating that it had total sales in excess of 485 000 copies 16 Cooke and Adams also co authored Arithmetic Review for Electronics published by McGraw Hill in 1968 after Cooke s death References Edit Biography Lieutenant Commander Nelson M Cooke Office of Information Internal Relations Division U S Navy 17 August 1967 Cooke Nelson M Mathematics for Electricians and Radiomen McGraw Hill 1942 K amp E Type 4139 Duplex http www mccoys kecatalogs com KEModels ke4139family htm Cooke Nelson M Mathematics for Electricity and Radio invited paper Mathematics Science Panel of the New York Society for the Experimental Study of Education 23 March 1943 Published in The Mathematics Teacher vol 36 Dec 1943 pp 329 332 Watson Raymond C Jr Solving the Naval Radar Crisis The Eddy Test Admission to the Most Challenging Training Program of World War II Trafford Publishing 2007 ISBN 978 1 4251 6173 6 Letter of Commendation From the Secretary of the Navy 10 Oct 1945 Service Record Nelson Mangor Cooke U S Navy Biography U S Navy op cit Cooke Engineering Files for Stock Offering Securities and Exchange Stock Digest 13 Sept 1961 https www sec gov news digest 1961 dig091361 pdf Handbook of Naval Shore Station Criteria Cooke Engineering Company Dec 1956 http www virhistory com navy manuals 92675 92675 00 pdf Buried Cable Radiation Study Cooke Engineering Company Defense Technical Documentation Center 1959 Power Line Induction Harmonic Tests Cooke Engineering Company Defense Technical Documentation Center 1961 Multi circuit Switching Connector Cooke Engineering Company http www ptodirect com Results Patents query PN 3665129 The Microtiter System Cooke Medical Research http jimmunol org content 88 3 local advertising pdf Books for Technology McGraw Hill Book Company Catalog 1962 Radio Data Handbook Allied Radio Corp fourth edition 1947 http www repeater builder com tech info pdfs allied data handbook 4th pdf McGraw Hill Incorporate Company Profile 2011 http www answers com topic the mcgraw hill companies inc ixzz1x8uyHZqoExternal links EditNelson Magor Cooke at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nelson M Cooke amp oldid 951980493, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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