Finding Aid to the Max Mason papers, 1877-1961Publisher:American Institute of Physics Niels Bohr Library & Archives Encoding Information:Machine-readable finding aid encoded by Melanie J. Brown in . Any revisions made to this finding aid occurred as part of the editing and encoding process. Finding aid is written in English. Description of the CollectionRepository:American Institute of Physics. Niels Bohr Library & Archives. Title and dates of collection:Max Mason papers 1877-1961 Papers created by:Mason, Max Size of collection:2 linear feet Short description of collection:The papers of Max Mason consist of professional and business correspondence, research notebooks, manuscripts, lantern slides and memorabilia. Language(s) of material:English Selected Search TermsThese papers have been indexed in the International Catalog of Sources for History of Physics and Allied Sciences (ICOS) using the following terms. Those seeking related materials should search under these terms. Biographical NoteMax Mason was born on October 26, 1877 in Madison, Wisconsin.. He graduated with an undergraduate and Master's degree from the University of Wisconsin, and a PhD in mathematics and physics from the University of Gottingen in 1903. Mason was an instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1903, then an assistant professor from 1904 to 1908 at Yale University. Mason left Yale to become a professor at the University of Wisconsin, where he taught Mathematical Physics and later attained research professor status. Mason interrupted his university teaching in 1917 for war research at the Naval Experimental Station, New London, Connecticut. He was the inventor of the Mason Hydrophone, a submarine detection device which isolated the noise of U-boat motors running underwater. He supervised his invention's manufacture and installation on American and British ships during the war. After World War I, Mason returned to academic research and in 1925, became the President of the University of Chicago. He resigned in 1928 to become Director of Natural Sciences at the Rockefeller Foundation, then President of the Foundation in 1929. During these years, he formed a business partnership with several research associates, Mason, Slichter and Hay, to process engineering patents and research. The firm dissolved in 1928. Mason formed another new company with both original and additional partners, Mason, Slichter and Gauld. The new firm, which operated from 1929 to 1936 also handled consulting on engineering patents and business. Mason left the Rockefeller Foundation in 1936 for a place on Caltech's Observatory council; he supervised the Palomar Observatory 200-inch telescope building and installation. He replaced George Ellery Hale as chairman of the council in 1938, where he served until 1948. Mason engaged in submarine r research again for the Navy during World War II. His accomplishments were awarded by a citation from the Naval Ordnance. He also received the U.S. Medal for Merit from President Truman in 1948. A Caltech executive council member and trustee until his retirement in 1951, Mason ended his career as a research associate in astrophysics. Mason was a member of committees on the National Research Council, the American Mathematical Society, American Physical Society and several foreign professional organizations, including the Deutsche Mathematiker Vereinigung. Mason died after a long illness in Claremont, California on March 23, 1961. Scope and Contents of CollectionThe Max Mason papers consist of four boxes of professional and business correspondence, research notebooks, manuscripts, lantern slides and memorabilia. Mason's professional correspondence ranges from 1927 to 1938. Most of the letters are from the years he was President of the Rockefeller Foundation. Mason's correspondence with colleagues primarily concerns avenues of research, committee investigations and job changes. The nature of Mason's professional relationships with Robert Millikan, Louis Slichter, Karl Taylor Compton and John D. Rockefeller Jr. are exemplified in these letters. Certain folders hold correspondence with members of committees; the letters of the Chicago's World's Fair centennial Committee and two National Academy of Science Award committees indicate the depths of Mason's involvement in professional organization activities. A National Academy of Science folder contains a short but interesting autobiographical outline. The business correspondence of Mason, Slichter and Hay comprises correspondence between Mason, his partners and clients who had major business contracts with the firm. Firm letters and reports concern consulting work to engineering businesses and patent developers. Most of the letters are between the partners and describe internal company decisions about patents, business deals and financial transactions. The later Mason, Slichter and Gauld company correspondence is predominantly internal, including business reports and letters on patent royalties, company and personal income taxes. The notebooks indicate the type of mathematical study Mason pursued. A marble-bound student notebook from 1900 contains notes for a mathematics course with David Hilbert while Mason was a doctoral student at Gottingen University. Two loose-leaf notebooks from 1942 and 1943, while Mason was at Caltech hold mathematical computations with loose sheets of figures and diagrams. The manuscript materials include typewritten drafts of Mason's work from different periods. These draft are prime examples of Mason's research and administrative writing ability. A number of address written by Mason for formal occasions also tell much about his professional attitudes toward scientific and everyday life. The addresses reveal a combination of personal anecdote and philosophical discussion; his topics emphasize rationality in the intellectual processes of scientific research. The final box holds lantern slides (which might be illustrations for a lecture on Mason's submarine detection work) and memorabilia, including degree diplomas and citations. Mason's contributions were primarily in mathematical physics, submarine detection development and scientific organization committee research. He published a number of articles and reports relating to his inventions and research. Mason was also an active administrator during his years at the University of Chicago, Rockefeller Foundation and California Institute of Technology. The Max Mason papers represent an important cross-section of his accomplishments. Organization and Arrangement of CollectionThis collection is organized into six series:
Series I is arranged first alphabetically, by correspondent name, then chronologically; all other series are arranged chronologically. Access to CollectionResearchers must have an approved access application on file in order to access archival materials. http://www.aip.org/history/nbl/access.html. Restrictions on Use of CollectionProvenance and Acquisition InformationReceived from Maxwell and William Mason and Mrs. W. T. Jones, 1963. Processing InformationThis collection was processed by in . Preferred Citation of CollectionBox [number], Folder [number], Max Mason papers. American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives, College Park, MD 20740, USA. Container List
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