Friday, 28 November 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " HENRY SAMPSON " INVENTOR FROM MISSISSIPPI - HE WAS THE FIRST AFRICAN AMERICAN TO ARN A Ph.D IN NUCLEAR ENGINEERING IN THE UNITED STATES : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK HEROES "

 BLACK        SOCIAL         HISTORY                                                                                                    






































































Henry Sampson (inventor) 

                   THE MAN WHO INVENTED THE CELL PHONE :

Henry T. Thomas Sampson, Jr. (born in Jackson, Mississippi in 1934) is an American inventor.[1]

Education

He graduated from Lanier High School in Jackson, Mississippi in 1951. He then attended Morehouse College in Atlanta before transferring to Purdue University in Indiana where he became a member of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity. He received a Bachelor's degree in science from Purdue University in 1956. He graduated with an MS degree in engineering from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1961. Sampson also received an MS in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 1965, and his PhD in 1967. He is the first African American to earn a Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering in the United States.

Early career

He was a member of the United States Navy between the years 1962 and 1964. Sampson was employed as a research chemical engineer at the Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake U.S. Naval Weapons Center, China Lake California, in the area of high energy solid propellants and case bonding materials for solid rocket motors.Sampson also served as the Director of Mission Development and Operations of the Space Test Program at the Aerospace Corporation in El Segundo, California.

Patents[edit]

His patents included a binder system for propellants and explosives and a case bonding system for cast composite propellants. Both inventions are related to solid rocket motors.
On July 6, 1971 he was awarded a patent, with George H. Miley, for a gamma-electrical cell, a device that produces a high voltage from radiation sources, primarily gamma radiation, with proposed goals of generating auxiliary power from the shielding of a nuclear reactor. Additionally, the patent cites the cell's function as a detector with self power and construction cost advantages over previous detectors.[2] This patent has often led to Sampson erroneously being cited as the inventor of the cellular phone.[3]

Film Historian

In addition to his career as an inventor, Sampson is noted film historian.[4] He wrote the book "Blacks in Black and White: A Source Book on Black Films," which examines often overlooked African American film makers from the first half of the 20th Century. In addition he authored "The Ghost Walks: A Chronological History of Blacks in Show Business, 1865-1910." Sampson produces documentary films on African American film makers. In 2005, he published "Singin' on the Ether Waves: a Chronological History of African Americans in Radio and Television Programming, 1925-1955" (two vols, 1270 pages), Scarecrow Press, Lanham, Maryland, and Oxford, UK, 2005.
In 2011 Sampson donated his considerable collection of historical film memorabilia to Jackson State University in Jackson Mississippi. The Dr. Henry T. Sampson Jr. Collection of African American Culture is housed in the H.T. Sampson Library, named for his father, H. T. Sampson Sr., former executive dean of Jackson State University.[5]

Awards and Honors

He earned a Atomic Energy Commission honor between 1964 and 1967. Later he was awarded the Black Image Award from Aerospace Corporation in 1982. He was awarded the Blacks in Engineering, Applied Science Award, and prize for education, by the Los Angeles Council of Black Professional Engineers in 1983.
Sampson is associated with the Board of Directors of Los Angeles Southwest College Foundation and is a technical consultant to the Historical Black Colleges and Universities Program.

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