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HERB GROSCH PAPERS, 1945-1998
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703

(4 cu. ft: 8 DB, 3 (.5) DB, 1 F/O, 1 (.5) ShB)

by: Charles Hargrove, August 2001

Biography

Herb Grosch (1918-) was born in Saskatoon, Canada and became a United States citizen with his father's naturalization. He attended grade school in Ontario and Ohio and high school in Michigan. He attended the University of Michigan from 1934 to 1941, receiving his B.S. in 1938 and his PhD in 1942, both in astronomy. An outspoken and controversial figure, Grosch's professional career was marked with numerous jobs. In 1941-1942 he was an astronomer for the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C. and later during World War II worked on fire control and optical engineering. Grosch's astronomical work required many calculations to be done by hand, thus he was well qualified to deal with the computational issues involved in early computer work. In 1945 he was hired by IBM for the Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory in New York, first to do backup calculations for the Manhattan Project and then to help run the Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator (SSEC), an early computer. Grosch was fired in 1951 and moved on to MIT where he worked as a part of the design group for the WHIRLWIND II computer. In 1952 he joined General Electric (GE) and set up and oversaw computer operations in Ohio, Massachusetts, and Arizona. In 1958 he returned to IBM and was the manager of their space program, before being fired again in 1959. Following IBM he moved to Europe and began consulting, notably a survey of the European computer industry for Control Data in 1962-1963. He returned to the United States to work again for GE in 1965, heading the DEACON project at GE's TEMPO think tank. Grosch left GE again in 1967. From 1967 through 1970 he directed the Center for Computer Sciences and Technology for the National Bureau of Standards. From 1973 to 1976 he was the editor of Computerworld magazine. Since then Grosch has lived in both Europe and America and done both consulting work and writing. He wrote and published a autobiography, Computer: Bit Slices of a Life, that describes his rather tempestuous relationships with GE and IBM. Grosch is perhaps best known for Grosch's Law which says the computing power increases as a square of the cost, or more concretely, in order to perform a computation twice as cheaply you must do it four times as fast.

Scope and Content

The Herb Grosch Papers, 1948-1998, cover the life and career of an early computer professional. It consists of correspondence, clippings, photographs, computer disks, reports, and other printed materials. The collection is approximately 4 cu. ft and is divided into 6 series: Series 1: Personal Materials, 1948-1998, Series 2: General Electric (GE), 1955-1968, 1993-1995, Series 3: Control Data, 1961-1966, Series 4: Other Employment, 1945 - 1994, Series 5: Professional Interests, 1954-1993, and Series 6: Computer History, 1949-1996. The largest and most comprehensive series within the collection focuses on Grosch's employment, in various capacities, by General Electric. The Control Data material is of special interest due to its in-depth studies of the European computer market in the early 1960s.

Series 1: PERSONAL MATERIALS, 1949-1998

The first series illustrates Grosch's personal life and consists of biographical sketches, correspondence, articles by and about him, photographs, and the manuscript of his autobiography. The manuscript is of special interest, in that it is a description of Grosch's life up to the 1960s. Also providing personal descriptions of Grosch's life is an extensive chronology of employment written by Grosch. The bulk of the materials date from the mid 1950s through the mid 1960s, with another smaller concentration of correspondence in the early 1990s.

Series 2: GENERAL ELECTRIC (GE),1955-1968, 1993-1995

This series contains correspondence, clippings, photographs and printed materials related to Grosch's two tenures at GE. The series is divided into four subseries: General GE Materials, GE's Evandale plant, GE's Computer Department at Arizona State University, and GE's TEMPO think tank in Santa Barbara. The subseries about the Evandale plant and the Arizona Computer Department are most comprehensive, describing the projects from their inception until Grosch's departure. Also of interest to those studying GE history is the collection of letters between Grosch and his Arizona boss, H.R. Oldfield, discussing Oldfield's book about GE and its failure in the computer business.

Series 3: CONTROL DATA CORPORATION, 1961-1966

This series contains correspondence, reports and printed materials covering Grosch's consulting work with Control Data. The bulk of the material has to do with a survey of the European computer industry and market, undertaken by Grosch for Control Data. Included are over forty reports that Grosch composed from plant visits he made to various European computer companies. Also included is the overall summary of these individual reports.

Series 4: OTHER EMPLOYMENT, 1945-1994

This series contains correspondence, printed materials, clippings and photographs related to other employment pursued by Grosch. The series covers Grosch's work at IBM, the Corporation for Economic and Industrial Resarch (CEIR), and his editorial reign at Computerworld magazine. Of interest to IBM researchers are the photos of early IBM gatherings at Endicott, New York and early IBM machines at the Watson Scientific Computer Laboratory.

Series 5: PROFESSIONAL INTERESTS, 1954-1993

This series consists of articles and other printed materials related to Grosch's scientific and technical interests. The majority of the series deals with Grosch's interest in computers, their applications and their effects upon society. A smaller set of material relates to other Grosch interests, notably astronomy and scientific standards.

Series 6: COMPUTER HISTORY, 1949-1996

This series consists of clippings, reports, and correspondence illustrating Grosch's interest in the history of computing. Of special interest is a report from U.S. Department of Commerce that lists the technical specifications of a number of old computers. Also, in addition to many more famous computing pioneers, Grosch collected information on English mathematician, L.J. Comrie, including a biographical sketch, photographs and correspondence carried on with Comrie's widow and son.

Related Materials

Grosch was interviewed as a part of the Smithsonian computer oral history project and the taped interviews exist in Collection #196, the Computer Oral History Collection, in the Archives Center.

Provenance

The materials in the collection were donated by Herb Grosch on October 13, 1999.

Container List

Box Folder
Series 1: PERSONAL MATERIALS, 1949-1998
Subseries A: Biographical Materials, ca. 1990s
1 1 Biographical Sketches
2 Notes and Reviews, Computer, Bit Slices of a Life
3 Computer, Bit Slices of a Life. Chap. 1-16
4 Computer, Bit Slices of a Life. Chap. 17-55
10 Computer Disks of Biography
Subseries B: Correspondence, 1948-1998
1 5 Letters to Parents, 1948, 1959-1962
6 ACM Correspondence, 1976, 1978, 1987, 1993-1994
7 Annals of Computer History Correspondence, 1990-1991, 1993-1994
8 Letters Sent 1957-1998
9 Letters Received 1956-1997
Subseries C: Travel and Chronology, 1959-1969
7 1 General Travel, 1956, 1966
2 Japan Travel, 1960, 1969 - 1970
3 Chronology, 1962-1963
4 Chronology, 1959-1963, 1965-1969
Subseries D: Assorted Materials , n.d.
1 10 Articles by Herb Grosch
F/O-13 1 Articles about Herb Grosch
1 11 Clippings: Grosch on education
12 Photographs
13 Assorted Personal Papers
F/O-13 2 Awards
Series 2: GENERAL ELECTRIC (GE),1955-1968, 1993-1995
Subseries A: General GE Materials, 1958-1966
8 GE Management Manuals and Company Directory
9 Data Processing Market Analysis
2 1 GE Assorted Papers
2 Correspondence 1963,1965, 1967
3 Salary
4 GE General Clippings
5 Printed Reports 1958, 1965-66, 1968
6 Recruitment Ads
Subseries B: GE Evandale Plant, 1955-1956
7 Evandale Assorted Papers
8 Correspondence, 1955-1956
9 Clippings
10 Photographs
11 Programming Manuals
12 Promotional Materials
Subseries C: GE Computer Department, 1955-1958, 1993-1995
13 Organization and Setup
3 1 Correspondence 1955-1958
2 Circumstances related to Grosch leaving Computer Department, 1958
3 Grosch-Oldfield Correspondence re: Oldfield's GE Book, 1993-1995
4 ABMA Contract, 1957
5 Clippings
6 Photographs
7 Promotional Materials
Subseries D: GE TEMPO, 1965-1967
8 General Documents
9 Clippings
10 DEACON Project
11 DEACON Clippings
4 1 Journal Articles related to DEACON
Series 3: CONTROL DATA CORPORATION, 1961-1966
Subseries A: General Materials
2 Clippings
3 Promotional Materials
4 Annual Reports, 1961-1962, 1964, 1966
Subseries B: European Computer Industry Survey, 1961-1963
5 Correspondence and Consulting Agreement, 1961-1962
6 Reimbursement Issues, 1962-1963
7 Grosch's Report on State of European Computer Industry
8 Grosch Plant Visit Reports
9 Independent Survey of European Industry
5 1 Printed Materials
Series 4: OTHER EMPLOYMENT, 1945-1994
5 2 IBM-Watson Lab, 1945-1949
3 Notes on IBM 360, c. 1960s
F/O-13 4 IBM Clippings, 1945, 1949, 1954, 1973-1974, 1990, 1993-1994
5 4 IBM Photographs, 1948-1952
5 Corporation for Economic and Industrial Research (CEIR), 1959
6 Computer World, 1973-1976
Series 5: PROFESSIONAL INTERESTS, 1954-1993
F/O-13 4 General Computer Articles
5 7 IFIP (Int'l Federation for Information Processing) 1962, 1965, 1992-1993
8 Electronic Data Processing Ads
9 Computer Automation
10 UNIVAC, 1964
11 Conferences, Symposia, Talks 1954, 1956-1957, 1959, 1961, 1966-1967
12 Tape of Dr. Paul Herget and Herb Grosch discussing Pons Baker comet, c. July 1954 RTC 703.1
11 1 Tape of Dr. Paul Herget and Herb Grosch discussing Pons Baker comet, c. July 1954, OA 703.1
6 1 Computer Use Reports, 1959, 1970
2 General Science Articles
3 Datamation
4 The Compleat Computer, 1976
Series 6: COMPUTER HISTORY, 1949-1996
5 Computing Pioneers, 1961-1996
F/O-13 5 Computing Pioneers, 1981-1982, 1994, 1996
6 6 L.J. Comrie, 1977, 1982-1983
F/O-13 6 L.J. Comrie Photographs
6 7 Early Computers, 1949-1996
8 Computer Museum, 1980-1984
12 Lantern Slides (Possible presentation slides)

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E-mail: archivescenter@si.edu
Revised: May 30, 2003