Introduction
Brief history of NCR Building 26
Edward Deeds, President of the National Cash Register Company, ordered a new educational building built in 1937 along the west edge of the Company's property. This unused portion of the campus ran along South Patterson Blvd., across the road from the Great Miami River. Previous to this, night classes were conducted for the employees in the Auditorium building on Main Street. Use of this new building offered classrooms dedicated to such disciplines as Mechanical Drawing, Home Economics, and Shop.
The building itself was of modern construction with hollow, reinforced concrete beams and walls. The floors were terrazo, walls concrete block and glass bricks were used for the windows. The simplified architecture had art deco elements.
Brief history of Dayton's role in WW2 code breaking
In 1938, the President of the National Cash Register Company, Edward Deeds, made a decision that would ultimately affect the lives of thousands of people worldwide. The Cash, as the company was known, was a manufacturing company but Deeds decided to pursue some experimental concepts for using electronics in the hardware NCR manufactured. To do this, he hired a native Daytonian, electrical engineer Joseph R. Desch, to start an electronics laboratory.
By 1941 Desch had two trusted researchers, Louis DeRosa and Robert Mumma, and several technicians. These men, largely self-taught, were bright and curious. Together they pursued the use of vacuum and gaseous tubes in advanced electronics. Through Deeds' ties to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Desch's laboratory was soon fulfillling contracts for the National Defense Research Committee (NDRC). These contracts became more complex as the Laboratory engaged in progressively serious and complicated war contracts. One contract for a high speed electronic counter was actually for the Manhattan Project, although Desch and his staff did not know at that time the real purpose of that project. When the Navy took over, the Lab was renamed the U.S. Naval Computing Machine Laboratory. In 1943 the circle of civilians in Desch's lab had grown to 30, but the Navy had brought in hundreds of WAVES, and about a hundred seamen in addition to Naval Officers of Op-20-G. NCR had to hire about a thousand civilians to help manufacture not only the contract for the codebreaking machine, but remaining contracts for the Navy and the NDRC.
The codebreaking machine that Desch's staff was assigned to design and build was called a Bombe. This machine was originally conceived by Polish mathematicians and called a bomba. When England received the concept and original designs for the machine, English code breakers renamed the machine a bombe, and this name stuck (although it is confusing for us, today).
All this sweat, tears and hard work took place in the building on the south edge of Dayton, Ohio which we are working to save.
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Last updated
13-Sep-2008
. Copyright D. Anderson. All Rights Reserved. Use of materials by permission.