| Copyright © 2009. National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Terms of Use and Privacy Statement |
Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.
Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter.
Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.
Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.
OCR for page 228
OCR for page 229
GEORGE WILLIAM KESSLER
1908-1983
BY W ALTER B AC H M A N
GEORGE WILLIAM KESSLER retired in 1973 as vice-president
for engineering and technology of the Babcock and Wilcox
Company, where for many years he was a leader in advanc-
ing the art and science of steam generation in marine and
stationary power plants of both the conventional and nuclear
types. He died on July 25,1983, in Winter Park, Florida.
George Kessler was born on March I, 1908, in St. Louis,
Missouri, the son of William Henry and Blanche M.
(Pougher) Kessler. He graduated from the University of Illi-
nois in 1930 with a B.S. in mechanical engineering. During
his years at the university, he was a member of various hon-
. .
Orary socletles.
After graduation, Mr. Kessler was employed by Babcock
and Wilcox as a student engineer and in 1932 was assigned
to the company's Analytical Engineering Department in New
York. He was transferred to the Marine Department in 1933
and became its head in 1938. During this period the United
States was beginning to revitalize its naval and merchant
fleets. From 1938 until his retirement, George Kessler was
associated with every major advance in marine steam ~ener-
ation; in many cases, he initiated these advances.
a
He contributed significantly to the boiler designs that re-
sulted in the highly efficient U.S. naval and merchant marine
fleets that were indispensable to victory in World War Il.
229
o
OCR for page 230
230
MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
After the war, he was a leading contributor to the design of
nuclear steam generators and new types of marine boilers of
all kinds.
In 1946, when the nation's utilities were embarking on a
vast expansion program, Kessler was transferred to the Bab-
cock and Wilcox Stationary Department. Named to positions
of increasing importance and responsibility, he made major
contributions to the highly efficient steam generating plants,
both conventional and nuclear, that have been so important
to the economic development of the United States. During
this period, he continuer! his interest in the marine field and
actively participated in the development of boiler designs for
the experimental naval destroyer programs and the early nu-
clear submarines, the Nautilus and the Sea Wolf. His influence
on power plant design extenclec! to a number of Western Eu-
ropean countries and Japan.
He was appointed assistant chief engineer in 1953 and
chief engineer in ~ 954. He was namer! vice-president of Bab-
cock and Wilcox in 1961.
George Kessler was the howler of many patents. He also
presented many technical papers and was the author of the
chapter on boilers in the Marks' Standard Handbook for Me-
chanical Engineers. His paper on furnace explosions and their
prevention, which was published in 1961, gave him wide rec-
ognition as an authority on boiler control and safety. As a
result, he served on a number of technical and research com-
mittees, including those of the Society of Naval Architects
and Marine Engineers, the American Society of Mechanical
Engineers, the Shipbuilders Council of America, the Ameri-
can Standards Association, the National Academy of Sci-
ences, the Metals Properties Council of the Engineering
Foundation, and the Welding Research Council.
In 1964 he was made a fellow of the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers; he was elected to membership in the
National Academy of Engineering in 1969. He was also a
member of the American Society of Naval Engineers, the So-
ciety of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, the Propel-
OCR for page 231
GEORGE WILLIAM KESSLER
231
ler Club, the Franklin Institute, ant! the honorary societies
Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Tau, and Pi Tau Sigma.
On July 2S, ~95 I, Kessler married Alice Maxwell, who died
January 26, 1973. The couple is survived by two chilctren,
Juclith Kessler Green and Dr. William CIarkson Kessler, and
several grandchilciren.
Representative terms from entire chapter:
george william