Gilbreths biography of albert

  • Gilbreth made this brief foray into the operating room in 1912 and con- tinued to pursue surgical motion study until about 1917, when his interests, influenced.
  • Lillian Evelyn Moller was born May 24, 1878 in Oakland, California to William Moller, a successful plumbing business owner, and Annie Delger.
  • AS I REMEMBER: AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY LILLIAN GILBRETH - Hardcover **Excellent**.
  • Albert W. Haws (1837 - 1912)

    Albert W. HAWS was born on 15 Feb 1837 in Illnois, Green, Wayne County. He emigrated in 1848. ALBERT CAME TO UTAH IN 1848, WITH LORENZO SNOW COMPANY.

    COMMENTS #31. ALBERT SERVED A MISSION TO HONOLULU AND THE SANDWICH ISLANDS. ORDAINED SEVENTY. He resided between 1858 and 1884 in Utah, Provo, Utah County. He died on 20 May 1912 in Utah, Vernal, Uintah. ALTERNATE PLACE: NAPLES, UTAH He was buried on 22 May 1912 in Utah, Vernal, Uintah. He was a SHERIFF. He was a WATERMASTER in Utah, Provo, Utah County. He was a WHEELWRIGHT. He was a BLACKSMITH. He was a FARMER. IN 1870, ALBERT HAD A HOUSEHOLD OF 6, REAL WEALTH OF $1500, AND PERSONAL WEALTH OF $300. Parents: Gilbreth HAWS and Hannah WHITCOMB. He was married to Nancy HAWS on 16 Jan 1857 in Utah, Provo, Utah County. Children were: Albert Alonzo HAWS, Elnora HAWS, Joseph Marlow HAWS, Marion Oliver HAWS, Mary Olive HAWS, Emily Melissa HAWS, Owen Apheus HAWS, Lydia Alberta HAWS, John Elmon HAWS.

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  • gilbreths biography of albert
  • Cal’s First Industrial Engineer?

    In November, Ferdinand Leimkuhler, Professor Emeritus, Purdue University, visited Cal to deliver a talk titled “The Ingenuity and Courage of Lillian Gilbreth.”  Gilbreth can be seen as one of Cal’s first industrial engineers (before there was an IEOR department), and was the first woman to speak at Cal graduation in 1900.  While Gilbreth is most often remembered as the mother from the book Cheaper By the Dozen, Leimkuhler argues that Gilbreth should also be remembered for her ingenuity as an engineer and efforts to help more women get into the workplace.

    Below we publish Leimkuhler’s talk in full, after which we ask a few follow-up questions for Leimkuhler from the Berkeley IEOR department.


    The Ingenuity and Courage of Lillian Gilbreth

    By Ferdinand Leimkuhler, Professor Emeritus, Purdue University

    I met Lillian Gilbreth 55 years ago when I joined the Purdue faculty. She had retired in 1928 and returned often to lecture. When I retired from Purdue in 2000 and wrote a history of industrial engineering, (slide 2) I learned more about her. She grew up in Oakland on the estate of her grandfather, Frederick Delger, the richest man in Oakland. His estate was betwee