Harry Wexler papers, 1929-1962.
Material type:
Mixed materialsDescription: 13,000 items; 44 containers; 19 linear feetSubject(s): - Baum, Werner A. -- Correspondence
- Brooks, Charles Franklin, 1891-1958 -- Correspondence
- Dryden, Hugh L. (Hugh Latimer), 1898-1965 -- Correspondence
- Harris, Oren, 1903- -- Correspondence
- Houghton, Henry G. -- Correspondence
- Hunsaker, Jerome C. (Jerome Clarke), 1886-1984 -- Correspondence
- Odishaw, Hugh -- Correspondence
- Reichelderfer, Francis W. (Francis Wilton), 1895-1983 -- Correspondence
- Von Neumann, John, 1903-1957 -- Correspondence
- Whipple, Fred L. (Fred Lawrence), 1906-2004 -- Correspondence
- United States. Air Weather Service
- United States. Weather Bureau
- Harvard University -- Students
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology -- Students
- United States Antarctic Expedition (1954-1959)
- Computers
- Geophysics
- International Geophysical Year, 1957-1958
- Meteorological satellites
- Meteorology
- TIROS satellites
- Universities and colleges -- Massachusetts
- Weather forecasting
- Antarctica -- Discovery and exploration
- Geophysicists
- Meteorologists
Open to research.
Correspondence, speeches, lectures, articles, subject files, biographical material, printed matter, weather charts and statistics, photographs, and other papers relating chiefly to Wexler's career as a geophysicist and meteorologist. Documents his work with the U.S. Weather Bureau and the Weather Service of the U.S. Air Force. Includes material on meteorological satellites such as TIROS I and the use of high-speed computers for numerical weather prediction and weather modification; records of the U.S. expedition to the Antarctic for the International Geophysical Year; and the Antarctic journal (1955-1959) kept by Wexler as chief scientist of the expedition in which he provides a detailed record of the organization and conduct of the mission. Includes papers from his school years at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Correspondents include Werner A. Baum, Charles Franklin Brooks, Hugh L. Dryden, Oren Harris, Henry G. Houghton, Jerome C. Hunsaker, Hugh Odishaw, Francis W. Reichelderfer, John Von Neumann, and Fred L. Whipple.
Dictaphone records transferred to Library of Congress Motion Picture, Broadcasting, and Recorded Sound Division.
Geophysicist and meteorologist.
Collection material in English.
Finding aid available in the Library of Congress Manuscript Reading Room and at
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