Penn Charter Magazine Fall 2014

Page 10

PC P RO F ILE S

The Wizard Electrician J. Presper Eckert Jr. OPC ’37 At Penn Charter, J. Presper Eckert Jr. was known by many as Pres and recognized by nearly all as “the wizard electrician.” The tag was both apt and prophetic. Within five years of graduating from Penn Charter, Eckert became one of the wizards behind the creation of the world’s first electronic general-purpose computer, better known as ENIAC. In his new book The Innovators, Walter Isaacson recognizes Eckert as one of “a group of hackers, geniuses and geeks” who created the modern computer and digital age. At the time he got involved in the ENIAC project, Eckert was only 22 and a graduate student in electrical engineering at the University of Pennsylvania. But, he soon became chief engineer of the top-secret project, building a behemoth of a machine that filled a whole floor at Penn’s Moore School of Engineering. ENIAC was 100-feet long and eight-feet high, weighed close to 30 tons and had 17,468 vacuum tubes. When fully operational in 1945, it could perform 5,000 additions and subtractions in one second.

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Other “computers” pre-dated ENIAC, but as Isaacson notes, it was the first fully electronic computer that could be programmed to do different tasks. It is the true predecessor of the computers we use today. Like all innovations, ENIAC involved collaboration. Eckert’s principal partner was John Mauchly, a physicist – first at Ursinus College and later at Penn – who developed the theoretical basis of ENIAC. Isaacson writes that the two men got along well, with Mauchly’s dreamy, affable ways a perfect counterpart to Eckert’s intensity. Eckert did have his quirks. As Isaacson notes, Eckert was “filled with nervous energy, he would pace the room, bite his nails, leap around and occasionally stand atop a desk

when he was thinking.” He was so wrapped up in his work, at night he would sleep on a cot next to the machine. The only child of a wealthy real estate developer, Pres was driven from his home in Germantown to Penn Charter by the family chauffeur, Isaacson writes. The school archives show his first year at PC was 1927 and that, by his graduation in 1937, he was firmly established as an engineering whiz. The Class Record for 1937 notes that his ambition was “to be like Edison.” His destiny, the editors predicted, was “to be greater than Edison.” When it came to electronics, Eckert was a prodigy. At age 12, he won a citywide science fair by building a guidance system for model boats using magnets and rheostats. At 14, he found a way to use household electrical current to operate the intercom system at one of his father’s apartment buildings, eliminating the need for bulky and unreliable batteries. In high school, Eckert dazzled his classmates with his inventions, but also made money selling them

Eckert, a member of the Blue team, was a member of the Instrumental, Dramatic, Glee and Camera clubs and, shown here in the 1937 yearbook (seated, second from left), the Science Club.


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