Frank Baldwin Jewett (September 5, 1879 – November 18, 1949) worked as an engineer for American Telegraph and Telephone where his work demonstrated transatlantic radio telephony using a vacuum-tube transmitter. He was also a physicist and the first president of Bell Labs. (From Wikipedia) More about Frank B. Jewett:
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Books by Frank B. Jewett Books about Frank B. Jewett:
1 additional book about Frank B. Jewett in the extended shelves:
Books by Frank B. Jewett: Jewett, Frank B. (Frank Baldwin), 1879-1949, contrib.: The Radio Industry: The Story of its Development, As Told by Leaders of the Industry to the Students of the Graduate School of Business Administration, George F. Baker Foundation, Harvard University (Chicago et al.: A. W. Shaw, 1928), also contrib. by David Sarnoff, J. Anton De Haas, Elmer E. Bucher, James G. Harbord, E. P. Edwards, Stephen B. Davis, H. P. Davis, Merlin Hall Aylesworth, J. L. Ray, Pierre Boucheron, and Harold C. Weber (PDF at worldradiohistory.com)
Additional books by Frank B. Jewett in the extended shelves: Jewett, Frank B. (Frank Baldwin), 1879-1949: Industrial research (University of Toronto Press, 1919) (page images at HathiTrust; US access only) Jewett, Frank B. (Frank Baldwin), 1879-1949: Motive and obligation; engineering, industrial research, research without utilitarian objective and the interdependence of the fields to which they pertain (National research council, 1925) (page images at HathiTrust; US access only) Jewett, Frank B. (Frank Baldwin), 1879-1949: The romance of research in the telephone industry : an outline of some research work in the Bell system and its far-reaching applications. ([New York] : [Bell Telephone Laboratories], [1929], 1929) (page images at HathiTrust)
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