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Dr James Robert Erskine-Murray FRSE MIEE (1868-1927) was a Scottish electrical engineer and inventor. A protege of Lord Kelvin, he also worked with Marconi and was a pioneer in the development of the telegraph. He wrote extensively on telegraphy and wireless communication.
William McMurray (1929–2006) was a pioneer in the field of power electronics. Holding both British and American citizenship, he was an electrical engineer, author and inventor who held 23 patents, and was most notable for his invention of the McMurray inverter and the McMurray-Bedford inverter.
engineer and expert in nanotechnology and biomedical engineering [53] John Anthony Murphy: 1965 Inventor of ARCnet, the first LAN [54] Julius Nieuwland: 1899 Inventor of neoprene [55] H. Frederik Nijhout: BS 1970 Evolutionary biologist and the John Franklin Crowell Professor of Biology at Duke University, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts ...
Pages in category "Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers officers" ... Jim Fox (pentathlete) G. ... Ronald King Murray, Lord Murray; N.
Former Los Angeles Times Sports columnist Jim Murray. (Los Angeles Times) A million thanks to Bill Dwyre for the great tribute to the incomparable and unparalleled brilliance of Jim Murray.
James R. Rice (1962), Harvard University physicist and professor and member of the National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Engineering. Herman Schneider (1894), University of Cincinnati former president and developer of cooperative education; James E. Talmage (Geology, 1884), University of Utah former president, author, and LDS apostle
Engineer and CEO of Encyde Corporation [184] Herbert Saffir: 1940 Developer of the Saffir–Simpson Hurricane Scale [185] Jeff S. Shamma: 1983 Control theorist, professor and Julian T. Hightower Chair in Systems and Controls in Georgia Tech's School of Electrical and Computer Engineering [186] W. Harry Vaughan: 1923
He was the fourth child of Elizabeth Murray Spencer and James Daniel Murray. Murray graduated from Lehigh University in 1895 with a degree in electrical engineering. While at Lehigh, Murray was a member of Chi Phi, Sword and Crescent (senior honorary society), and E. E. Society. [3]