Whitman College and Northwest Archives
345 Boyer Ave.
Walla Walla, WA 99362
(509) 527-5922
archives@whitman.edu
www.whitman.edu/archives



Guide to the Walter Brattain Family Papers, 1860-1990


USHTM_WCMss22





Finding aid prepared by Andreea Coca, Colleen McFarland, Janet Mallen, and Emi Hastings from 2006 to 2007

Finding aid encoded by Michael Paulus
Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.


Overview of the Collection

 
Repository Name:
 

Whitman College and Northwest Archives

345 Boyer Ave.
Walla Walla, WA 99362
(509) 527-5922
archives@whitman.edu
www.whitman.edu/archives

 
Collection Number:
 

USHTM_WCMss22

 
Creator:
 

Brattain, Walter H.

 
Title:
 

Walter Brattain Family Papers

 
Dates:
 

1860-1990 (inclusive)
1901-1990 (bulk)

 
Quantity:
 

Approximately 38 linear feet
45 boxes

 
Languages:
 

Materials are in English 

 
Summary:
 

This collection contains the scientific and personal papers of Walter Brattain, an inventor of the transistor and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics, in addition to his family papers.

 

Biographical Note

Walter Houser Brattain was born on Feb. 10th, 1902 in Amoy, China. He was the son of Ross R. Brattain and Ottilie Houser, the oldest of their five children. Two of his sisters died very young; he spent his childhood in Washington State with his third sister, Mari Brattain, and his brother, R. Robert Brattain. The Brattain family had many Whitman College connections: Ross and Ottilie met at Whitman and Ross graduated from the college in 1901. Walter graduated from Whitman in 1924 with majors in Physics and Math under Professors Benjamin H. Brown (Physics) and Walter A. Bratton (Math).

There were three other physicists of note who graduated in Walter Brattain’s class: Walker Bleakney, E.J. Workman, and Vladimir B. Rojansky, with whom he collaborated over the years. The four of them were known as Whitman’s “Four Horsemen of Physics.” While a Whitman student, Brattain was passionate about math, an excellent tennis player and member of the Kirkman Club, a fraternal group.

After receiving his Bachelor of Science degree from Whitman, Brattain was awarded a Masters of Arts by the University of Oregon in 1926 and a Doctorate of Philosophy by the University of Minnesota in 1929. After completing his graduate studies, Brattain worked for the radio section of the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C., from 1927 to 1928. In 1929 he joined the technical staff of Bell Telephone Laboratories and worked as a research physicist until his retirement in 1976. During World War II, he was associated for 22 months with the National Defense Research Committee at Columbia University, working on magnetic detection of submarines. Brattain was a visiting lecturer at Harvard University during the fall of 1952 and a visiting lecturer at Whitman College between 1962 and 1963, becoming a visiting professor between 1963 and 1972 and an adjunct professor from 1972 until 1976. He remained afterwards as a consultant at Whitman.

Brattain was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956, with Dr. John Bardeen and Dr. William B. Shockley, “for research on semiconductors and the discovery of the transistor effect.” These three American physicists invented the transistor on December 23, 1947, at the American Telephone and Telegraph Company at Bell Laboratories. The transistor’s name derives from the descriptive phrase “transfer of signal through varsitor.” The transistor is a solid state device involved in connecting battery power to signal power. As a key element in amplifying small electrical signals and in processing of digital information, it is today an active component in all electronic systems. Brattain received honorary Doctor of Science degrees from Portland University in 1952, from Whitman College and Union College in 1955, and from the University of Minnesota in 1957. In 1952 he was awarded the Stuart Ballantine Medal of the Franklin Institute, and in 1954 the John Scott Medal. The degree at Union College and the two medals were received jointly with Dr. John Bardeen, in recognition of their work on the transistor. In 1974, he was named to the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

Brattain was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the Franklin Institute, a Fellow of the American Physical Society, and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was also a member of the commission on semiconductors of the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics and of the Naval Research Advisory Committee. At Whitman, he was nominated to membership in Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. He also served as an Overseer for the college.

The chief field of Brattain’s research was the surface properties of solids, as well as research directed at (1) thermionic emission and absorbed layers on tungsten, phospholipids bylayers or membranes rectification and (2) photo effects at semiconductor surfaces (ergo, cuprous oxide, silicon and germanium). Among his contributions are the discoveries of photo effect at the free surface of a semiconductor, the invention of the point-contact transistor jointly with Dr. John Bardeen, and shared research on piezoelectric frequency standards, magnetometers, blood clotting, and infrared detectors.

Walter Brattain married Dr. Keren Gilmore (chemist) in 1935 and had a son, William G. Brattain, in April, 1943. Keren died in April 1957. In May, 1958, he married Mrs. Emma Jane (Kirsch) Miller, a Whitman College alumna. He had three stepchildren and 10 grandchildren. Walter Brattain died on October 13, 1987, in Seattle, Washington, of Alzheimer’s disease.

Content Description

The collection is divided into two sections: materials created by Walter Brattain in the context of his profession and career (series 1-6), and materials created by the Brattain family (series 7-11).

The Walter Brattain papers contain correspondence between Brattain and his collaborators, Bell Laboratories, Nobel Prize-related correspondence, and letters to other Whitman College alumni. Brattain’s writings include his autobiography, speeches, and scientific publications. In addition, the collection contains materials related to his teaching career, research notes, numerous awards and honors, and travels to conferences around the world. The collection also contains photographs of college and reunions, dinner ceremonies and awards, scientific experiments, transistors, and conference trips, specifically those to China and Europe. Rounding out the collection are published scientific papers, awards and diplomas, newspaper clippings, and audio and video recordings.

The Brattain family papers include family histories, correspondence, writings, and photographs. The correspondence series contains letters written or received by members of the Brattain family, including Walter, Ross and Ottilie, Emma Jane, and Keren Brattain. Also included are family and vacation photos. An extensive collection of glass lantern slides documents scenes of daily life in China in the early 1900s. The two groups of materials are not unrelated and some materials might be valuable to both sections but integrated only in one.

Administrative Information

Acquisition Information 

Donated to the Whitman College and Northwest Archives by William and Evelyn Brattain in 1990.

Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Access 

Restrictions are noted.

Restrictions on Use 

Researchers are responsible for using in accordance with 17 U.S.C. Copyright not transferred to Whitman College.

Preferred Citation 

Walter Brattain Family Papers, Whitman College and Northwest Archives, Walla Walla, Washington.

Subjects

Brattain, Walter H. (Walter Houser), 1902-1987--Archives
 
Other Creators :
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc.
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc.
Whitman College--Authors, Alumni
Physics
Semiconductors
Transistors

Detailed Description of the Collection

The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.


 

Series 1.:  Correspondence, 1921-1982

4 linear feet 4 boxes
Boxes 1-3: General correspondence (incoming and outgoing) arranged by year


Box 4: Correspondence (incoming and outgoing) arranged by writer or recipien
 
 
Container(s)
Description
Dates
 
box/folder
1/1


General Correspondence
  1923-1939
 
1/2

General Correspondence
  1940-1949
 
1/3

General Correspondence
  1950-1951
 
1/4

General Correspondence
  January-May 1952
 
1/5

General Correspondence
  June-December 1952
 
1/6

General Correspondence
  1953
 
1/7

General Correspondence
  1954
 
1/8

General Correspondence
  1955
 
1/9

General Correspondence
  1956
 
1/10

General Correspondence
  1957
 
1/11

General Correspondence
  1958
 
1/12

General Correspondence
  January-April 1959
 
1/13

General Correspondence
  May-December
 
1/14

General Correspondence
  1960
 
1/15

General Correspondence
  January-June 1961
 
1/16

General Correspondence
  July-December 1961
 
2/1

General Correspondence
  January-April 1962
 
2/2

General Correspondence
  May-December 1962
 
2/3

General Correspondence
  January-May 1963
 
2/4

General Correspondence
  June-December 1963
 
2/5

General Correspondence
  1964
 
2/6

General Correspondence
  1964
 
2/7

General Correspondence
  1965
 
2/8

General Correspondence
  1965
 
2/9

General Correspondence
  1966
 
2/10

General Correspondence
  1966
 
2/11

General Correspondence
  January-May 1967
 
2/12

General Correspondence
  June-December 1967
 
3/1

General Correspondence
  1968
 
3/2

General Correspondence
  1969
 
3/3

General Correspondence
  1970
 
3/4

General Correspondence
  1971
 
3/5

General Correspondence
  1972
 
3/6

General Correspondence
  1973
 
3/7

General Correspondence
  1974
 
3/8

General Correspondence
  1975
 
3/9

General Correspondence
  1976
 
3/10

General Correspondence
  1977
 
3/11

General Correspondence
  1978
 
3/12

General Correspondence
  1979
 
3/13

General Correspondence
  1980
 
3/14

General Correspondence
  1981-1982
 
4/1

Autographs
  1979-1982, undated
 
4/2

Autograph Requests (Denied)
  1980-1982, undated
 
4/3

Roland Bainton Correspondence
  1973
 
4/4

Walker Bleakney Letter
  1925
 
4/5

R. Robert Brattain Correspondence and Papers
  1965, undated
 
4/6

Benjamin Brown Correspondence
  1925
 
4/7

Henry Jackson Correspondence 1
  1965-1969
 
4/8

Henry Jackson Correspondence 2
  1970-1981
 
4/9

John Scott Award Correspondence
  1955
 
4/10

Lindau Correspondence
  1981-1982
 
4/11

“Mike” Long Correspondence
  1972-1973
 
4/12

Publishers Correspondence
  1972-1978
 
4/13

Reference Letters
  1963-1979
 
4/14

Vladimir Rojansky
  1944-1981
 
4/15

Round Robin Letters – Walter Brattain, Vladimir Rojansky, E.J. Workman, and Walker Bleakney
  1928-1929
 
4/16

Donald Rudin and Paul Mueller Correspondence
  1966-1967
 
4/17

“Understanding Science” Lectures Correspondence
  1975-1978
 
4/18

Whitman College Correspondence
  1962-1964
 
4/19

Whitman College 50th Anniversary of the Class of 1924 Correspondence
  1974
 
4/20

Nobel Letters and Family Correspondence
  1942-1956
 
4/21

Correspondence - Miscellaneous
  1966-1980
 
4/22

From Nobel winners to Pope
  1965
 
4/23

Letters to Congressmen and President
  1975
 
4/24

Answered Congratulations
  1956
 
4/25

Nobel Prize Congratulations Telegrams
  1956
 
4/26

Nobel Prize Congratulations Letters and Cards
  1956-1957
 
4/27

Nobel Prize Congratulations Letters
  1956
 
4/28

Vladimir Rojansky and Walker Bleakney Letters
  1924-1974
 
4/29

From Whitman Alumni to Walter Brattain
  1921-1928
 
4/30

Harvard Engineering School – Walker Bleakney
  1924-1937
 
4/31

Letters to and from Vladimir Rojansky
  1924, 1974
 
4/32

Round Robin Booster Letters
  1928-1930
 
4/33

Letters from Walker Bleakney to Walter Brattain
  1925-1931
 
4/34

Background information on the November 7, 1925, letter of Walker Bleakney to Vladimir Rojansky and Walter Brattain
  undated
 
4/35

John Bardeen
  undated
 
4/36

Hector Chevigny
  undated
 
4/37

Letters from Wheaton Kraft
  1916-1929
 
4/38

William Shockley
  undated
 
4/39

Foreign Correspondence
  1971-1976
 
4/40

Walter Bratton
  1942

 

Series 2.:  Career, 1917-1989

11 linear feet 11 boxes
This series documents Walter Brattain’s career as a student and teacher of physics, as well as his scientific research, speeches, and writings. In addition, this series contains information on the conferences he attended and the professional memberships and accolades he received.
 
 
Container(s)
Description
Dates
   
Sub-series 1:  Teaching
 
 
Walter Brattain taught at Whitman College from the late 1960s through the early 1970s. He taught several physics courses, as well as general science courses designed to help students “understand natural phenomena.”
 
box/folder
5/1


Science 51 Final Exams
  undated
 
5/2

Science 51 Grade Book RESTRICTED UNTIL 2040
  undated
 
5/3

Science 51 Lectures
  1967-1967
 
5/4

Science 51 Lectures
  1970
 
5/5

Science 51 Lectures
  1971
 
5/6

Science 51 Master Lectures
  undated
 
5/7

Science 51 Mid-Semester
  1971
 
5/8

Science 51 Original Lectures, 1-9
  undated
 
5/9

Science 51 Original Lectures, 10-13
  undated
 
5/10

Science 51 Notes
  undated
 
5/11

Science 51 Review
  undated
 
5/12

Science 52 Exams
  1966-1972
 
5/13

Science 52 Grades
  1967
 
5/14

Science 52 Lectures
  undated
 
5/15

Science 52 Lectures
  1969
 
5/16

Science 52 Lectures
  1971
 
5/17

Science 52 Master Lectures
  undated
 
5/18

Science 52 Notes
  1968
 
5/19

Science 52 Original Lectures 1
  undated
 
5/20

Science 52 Original Lectures 2
  undated
 
5/21

Science 52 Quiz
  undated
 
5/22

Science 52 Review
  undated
 
5/23

Science 52 Supplementary Material
  undated
 
5/24

Science 51 and 52 Tests, Quizes, and Review Stencils
  undated
 
5/25

Science 51 and 52 Tear Sheets
  undated
 
6/1

96B Solid State
  undated
 
6/2

Physics 243 Assignments and Tests
  undated
 
6/3

Physics 243 Experiments
  undated
 
6/4

Physics 243 Lectures
  undated
 
6/5

Physics 297 Lectures
  undated
 
6/6

Class Names
  undated
 
6/7

Continental Classroom
  undated
 
6/8

Corrected Lectures
  undated
 
6/9

Cost of Revising Lectures
  undated
 
6/10

Dates of Talks and Papers for Minnesota
  undated
 
6/11

Grades and Miscellaneous RESTRICTED UNTIL 2040
  undated
 
6/12

Lecture Book Notes
  undated
 
6/13

Master Lectures
  undated
 
6/14

Master Lectures Extras
  undated
 
6/15

Minnesota
  1953
 
6/16

Notes on Physics of Transistors and Semiconductors Course
  undated
 
6/17

Revised Lectures
  undated
 
6/18

Sample Lectures 1 and 12
  undated
 
6/19

Teaching Transistor Physics
  undated
 
6/20

Transcripts of Minnesota Lectures
  undated
 
6/21

University of Washington Summer Institute
  undated
 
6/22

Differential Equations of Mathematical Physics
  undated
 
6/23

Electrical Engineering Laboring Notes
  undated
 
6/24

Old Exam Questions, Minnesota and Earlier
  undated
 
6/25

Optics
  undated
 
6/26

Physics Department Notes
  undated
 
6/27

Physics Folder
  undated
 
6/28

Spring Quarter Dynamics Notes
  undated
 
6/29

University of Oregon Advanced Elective Course Notebook
  undated
   
Sub-series 2:  Transistor-Related Materials
 
 
This sub-series contains articles, photographs, speeches, and other materials related to the development of the transistor. Included are writings and correspondence by Walter Brattain, as well as materials he collected.
 
7/1

“Experiments Leading Up to the Discovery of the Transistor,” talk given at conference in Bell Telephone Laboratories
  1948
 
7/2

Articles on Transistor’s Invention
  1948
 
7/3

Transistor Promotional Photographs
  1940s
 
7/4

Transistor Press Releases
  1948
 
7/5

Transistor’s Discovery
  1940-1980
 
7/6

Discovery Photos
  undated
 
7/7

Transistor Memorandum
  undated
 
7/8

Transistor Articles
  1948
 
7/9

Transistor Talks
  1948
 
7/10

“The Story of the Transistor”
  1958
 
7/11

“Genesis of the Transistor”
  undated
 
7/12

“Genesis of the Transistor” Memorandum
  undated
 
7/13

“Genesis of the Transistor” Miscellaneous
  undated
 
7/14

“Genesis of the Transistor” Pamphlets
  1972
 
7/15

Correspondence Regarding Publication of “Genesis of the Transistor”
  1975
 
7/16

Published “Genesis of the Transistor”
  1968
 
7/17

“Genesis of the Transistor” Reference Material
  undated
 
7/18

Transistor Articles
  1948-1979
 
7/19

Transistor Patents
  1953
 
7/20

Early Transistor Article Clippings
  1948-1955
 
7/21

Tenth Anniversary of the Transistor
  1958
 
7/22

Essay on the Tenth Anniversary of the Transistor
  1958
 
7/23

20th Anniversary of the Transistor
  1968
 
7/24

25th Anniversary of the Transistor
  1972
 
7/25

25th Anniversary of the Transistor 2
  1972
 
7/26

25th Anniversary of the Transistor 3
  1972
 
7/27

25th Anniversary Statement
  undated
 
7/28

Transistor Anniversary & Clippings
  1972-1981
 
7/29

Transistor Circuits Miscellaneous
  1952-1954
 
7/30

J. Bardeen and W.H. Brattain, “The Transistor, A Semi-Conductor Tale”
  1948
 
7/31

J. Bardeen and W.H. Brattain, “Physical Principles Involved in Transistor Action”
  1948
 
7/32

J. Bardeen, W.H. Brattain, W. Shockley, and G.L. Pearson, “The Transistor and Related Experiments”
  1948
 
7/33

Transistor Miscellaneous
  1972
 
7/34

“Transistor Resisters”
  undated
 
7/35

Charles Weiner, “The Social Inventions Behind the Transistor”
  1972
 
7/36

“The Physics of Transistors and Semiconductors” Booklet
  undated
 
7/37

Bell Labs Correspondence and Soundsheet
  1956-1975
 
7/38

Press Release - Transistors
  1948
 
7/39

Transistor Clippings
  1948-1987
 
7/40

Nobel Clippings
  1956-1963
 
7/41

Transistor and Nobel Publications
  1948-1984
 
7/42

Walter Brattain, “Discovery of the Transistor Effect: One Researcher’s Personal Account,” in Adventures in Experimental Physics
  undated
 
45/1

Picture and Data for the First Transistor
  1947
   
Sub-series 3:  Speeches and Writings
 
 
This sub-series includes handwritten and typewritten manuscripts as well as published articles written or co-authored by Walter Brattain. The bound collections of Bell Telephone Systems monographs include a number of articles by Walter Brattain.
 
8/1

Autobiography
  undated
 
8/2

“Saga of An Expedition to Stockholm, Sweden, December, 1956” (multiple copies)
  undated
 
8/3

“Contacts Between Metals and Semiconductors”
  undated
 
8/4

“Development of Concepts in Semiconductor Research” Promotional Poster
  1959
 
8/5

Dun’s Review Statement
  undated
 
8/6

“Is the Scientist Morally Responsible for the Use of His Discovery?”
  undated
 
8/7

Harvard Engineering School Exam: Vladimir Rojansky, Walker Bleakney, and Walter Brattain
  1924, 1974
 
8/8

Response to Senator Thomas Henning re: Secrecy and Science
  undated
 
8/9

“How to Justify Scientific Research at the Executive Level – In Government – In Defense Department”
  undated
 
8/10

“The Physics of Transistors,” Outline of Speech
  1949
 
8/11

Lecture Promotional Clippings
  1952-1968
 
8/12

Lipid Papers
  1968-1970
 
8/13

Local College Talks
  undated
 
8/14

“Man and The Universe”
  1959
 
8/15

Northwest Conference on College Physics – outline of talk and experiment notes
  1963
 
8/16

Meteor Sighting
  undated
 
8/17

“Semiconductors,” talk given to Metropolitan Section of American Physical Society
  1937
 
8/18

“Oscillographic Study of Discharge of Condenser Through Inductance and Resistance and Spark Gap,” Thesis, University of Oregon
  1926
 
8/19

Talk given at Phi-Beta Kappa and Stories
  1970
 
8/20

“A Pint’s A Pound The World Around”
  undated
 
8/21

Papers
  undated
 
8/22

The Physics of Transistors and Semiconductors, including “The Copper Oxide Rectifier” by Brattain
  undated
 
8/23

“Remarks on NIN Group”
  undated
 
8/24

“Reminiscences of 40 Years in Physics”
  undated
 
8/25

American Institute of Physics History
  1981
 
8/26

Special Talks, 1
  1957-1963
 
8/27

Special Talks, 2
  1959-1976
 
8/28

“Genesis of the Transistor” Correspondence
  1965-1966
 
8/29

“Genesis of the Transistor,” notes and publicity, sponsored by Albuquerque, New Mexico Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
  1978
 
8/30

Speech Given at Dedication of Boeing’s Research Building and Speech Given to High School Students
  1960-1961
 
8/31

“Some Points about Surface Phenomena”
  1970
 
8/32

Talks
  1956-1968
 
8/33

Testimony 1
  1961-1965
 
8/34

Testimony 2
  1965
 
8/35

Testimony 3
  undated
 
8/36

Transcripts of Interviews Taken on Tape Recorder
  1964, 1974
 
8/37

“The University in A Troubled Society”
  undated
 
8/38

Northwest Conference on College Physics
  1963
 
8/39

“Man and the Universe,” Whitman College Centennial Lecture
  1959
 
8/40

“What is Science?” Washington State University Lecture
  1971
 
8/41

“Genesis of the Transistor,” Washington State University Lecture
  1979
 
8/42

“Optical Constants of Germanium”
  1948
 
8/43

Continental Classroom, “Physics for the Atomic Age,” NBC Television Script
  1959
 
8/44

W.H. Brattain and W. Shockley, “Density of Surface States on Silicon Deduced from Contact Potential Measurements”
  1947
 
8/45

W.H. Brattain and L.G. Pearson, “Changes in Conductivity of Germanium Induced by Alpha-Particle Bombardment”
  1950
 
8/46

“Efficiency of Excitation by Electron Impact and Anomalous Scattering in Mercury Vapor,” Thesis, University of Minnesota
  1929
 
8/47

P.J. Boddy and W.H. Brattain, “Electrical Properties of the Anodically Etched Germanium Surface”
  1963
 
8/48

P.N. Sawyer, Kwang-Tzen Wu, S.A. Wesolowski, W.H. Brattain, and P.J. Boddy, “Electrochemical Precipitation of Blood Cells on Metal Electrodes: An Aid in the Selection of Vascular Prostheses?”
  1965
 
8/49

A.M. Portis, A.F. Kip, C. Kittel, and W.H. Brattain, “Electron Spin Resonance in a Silicon Semiconductor”
  1953
 
8/50

“Evidence for Surface States on Semiconductors from Change in Constant Potential on Illumination”
  1947
 
8/51

“Historical Development of Concepts Basic to the Understanding of Semiconductors”
  1968
 
8/52

W.H. Brattain and P.J. Boddy, “Interaction of Iodide Ion with Germanium Electrodes”
  1965
 
8/53

J. Bardeen, W.H. Brattain, and W. Shockley, “Investigation of Oxidation of Copper by Use of Radioactive Cu Tracer”
  1946
 
8/54

T.M. Buck and W.H. Brattain, “Investigations of Surface Recombination Velocities on Ge by the Photoelectromagnetic Methods”
  1955
 
8/55

“Irreversible Electrochemical Precipitation of Mammalian Platelets and Intravascular Thrombosis”
  1964
 
8/56

“Introduction to the Chemistry and Physics of Surfaces”
  undated
 
8/57

P.N. Sawyer, K.T. Wu, S.A. Wesolowski, W.H. Brattain, and P.J. Boddy, “Long-Term Potency of Solid-Wall Vascular Prosthesis”
  1965
 
8/58

Memorandum: “A Vacuum System for Vaporization of Metal Contacts Onto Copper-Oxide Varistors” (includes photographs)
  1937
 
8/59

Old Abstracts
  1930-1937
 
8/60

College Association for Public Events and Services (California)
  1968
 
8/61

D.R. Kalkwarf, D.L. Frasco, and W.H. Brattain, “Current Rectification and Action Potentials Across Thin Lipid Membranes” and “Ion-Diffusion Potentials and Electrification Rectification Across Lipid Membranes Activated by Excitation-Induced Material”
  1972
 
8/62

W.H. Brattain and P.J. Boddy, “Surface States at a Germanium-Electrolyte Interface”
  1962
 
8/63

“Rectification Series” abstract
  1946
 
8/64

P.J. Boddy and W.H. Brattain, “Residual Surface Recombination of Germanium Anodes”
  1965
 
8/65

“Semiconductor Surface Phenomena”
  1950
 
8/66

“Photo Cells at the Surface of a Semiconductor” (including photographs)
  1944
 
8/67

W.H. Brattain and C.G.B. Garrett, “Surface Properties of Germanium and Silicon”
  1954
 
8/68

“Surface Properties of Semiconductors,” lecture to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
  1956
 
8/69

J.A. Becker and W.H. Brattain, “Thermionic Work Function of Slope and Intercept of Richardson Plots”
  1934
 
8/70

Varistors, including “The Copper Oxide Varistor” by Walter Brattain
  undated
 
8/71

D.R. Kalkwarf, D.L. Frasco and W.H. Brattain, “Current Rectification and Action Potentials Across Thin Lipid Membranes”
  undated
 
8/72

J.A. Becker and W.H. Brattain, “Useful Equations in the Design of Thermistors”
  1944
 
8/73

“Development of Concepts in Semiconductor Research,” Richtmyer Lecture
  1956
 
8/74

“Dependence of Small Signal Parameters of n-p-n Transistors on Width of Collector Space Charge Layer”
  1953
 
8/75

“John Dewey” Essay
  undated
 
8/76

“Paper for Cross Roads”
  circa 1925
 
8/77

Personal
  undated
 
9/1

Bell Telephone System Monographs, volume 1
  1947-1950
 
9/2

Bell Telephone System Monographs, volume 2
  1950-1952
 
9/3

Bell Telephone System Monographs, volume 3
  1951-1953
 
9/4

Bell Telephone System Monographs, volume 4
  1953-1954
 
9/5

Bell Telephone System Monographs, volume 5
  1954-1955
 
9/6

Bell Telephone System Semiconductor Monographs, volume 1
  1946-1951
 
9/7

Bell Telephone System Semiconductor Monographs, volume 2
  1952-1953
 
9/8

Bell Telephone System Semiconductor Monographs, volume 3
 
 
9/9

Reprints of Articles by Walter Brattain
  1949-1962
   
Sub-series 4:  Conferences
 
 
This sub-series includes itineraries, pamphlets, and correspondence related to conferences Walter Brattain attended around the world.
 
10/1

Itinerary for Stockholm Trip
  1956
 
10/2

Amsterdam Conference
  1953-1954
 
10/3

Basel, Switzerland, International Union of Pure and Applied Physics
  1966
 
10/4

Boston
  1971
 
10/5

Brussels and Europe
  1958
 
10/6

Brussels International Physics Conference (Photos)
  1958
 
10/7

Brussels Telecommunications Exposition
  1958
 
10/8

California Institute of Technology Albuquerque Trip
  1978
 
10/9

California Institute of Technology’s 75th Anniversary
  1966
 
10/10

Cambridge – 10th International Conference on the Physics of Semiconductors
  1970
 
10/11

China
  undated
 
10/12

China Trip Directory
  1979
 
10/13

Columbia Basin College
  1968
 
10/14

Conference on Physics of Semiconductor Surface
  1956
 
10/15

Devices Research Conference
  1957
 
10/16

Europe
  1965
 
10/17

Europe
  1971
 
10/18

Europe
  1973
 
10/19

Europe Reservations and Expenses
  1958
 
10/20

Exeter Attendees
  1962
 
10/21

Gordon Conference
  1977
 
10/22

Gustavius Adolphus
  1975
 
10/23

International Conference on the Physics and Chemistry of Solid Surface Guest List
  1969
 
10/24

Photo Identification for the International Conference on Semi-Conductors
  1950
 
10/25

Japan, 1
  1958
 
10/26

Japan, 2
  1959
 
10/27

Japan
  1966
 
10/28

Korea
  1973
 
10/29

Kwajalein, Marshall Islands: Bell Laboratories Conference
  1973
 
11/1

Lindau Attendees
  1962
 
11/2

Lindau - Exeter
  1962
 
11/3

Lindau
  1965
 
11/4

Lindau
  1968
 
11/5

Lindau Attendee List
  1973
 
11/6

Lindau – Meeting of Nobel Prize Winners
  1979
 
11/7

London Institute of Electrical Engineers
  1959
 
11/8

London – 50th Meeting of the Naval Research Advisory Committee
  1961
 
11/9

London
  1974
 
11/10

Moscow
  1968
 
11/11

Northwest Regional Energy Conference
  1978
 
11/12

Paris
  1975
 
11/13

Physics of Semiconductors Conference
  1970
 
11/14

Pittsburg Convocation of Nobel Laureates
  1981
 
11/15

Pittsburg Convocation of Nobel Laureates Photographs
  1981
 
11/16

Portland, Oregon, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
  May 27, 1968
 
11/17

Portland, Oregon, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
  1968
 
11/18

Prague, (Czechoslovakia) Czech Republic
  1960
 
11/19

Providence Conference on the Physics and Chemistry of Solid Surfaces
  1964
 
11/20

Reading – First Trip
  1950
 
11/21

Rochester Semiconductor Conference
  1958
 
11/22

Russian Visits
  1956-1963
 
11/23

Stockholm
  1975
 
11/24

Solid State Seminar
  1964-1965
 
11/25

Stuttgart
  1964
 
11/26

Taipei
  1973
 
11/27

Tehran
  1965
 
11/28

Transistor Conferences
  1948, 1950
 
11/29

Travel
  1972-1973
 
11/30

Trip Expense Accounts
  1948-1960
 
11/31

Versailles Conference
  1975
 
11\/32

Visiting Scientists Program in Physics
  1959-1961
   
Sub-series 5:  Experiments and Data
 
 
12/1

Α (Alpha) Particles
  undated
 
12/2

Ana Data
  1968
 
12/3

Ana Data
  1969
 
12/4

Ana Data
  1970
 
12/5

Apparatus
  undated
 
12/6

Auxiliary Data and Calculation
  undated
 
12/7

CaCl
  undated
 
12/8

Circuit Problems
  undated
 
12/9

Data Notes, 1
  undated
 
12/10

Data Notes, 2
  undated
 
12/11

Data Notes, 3
  undated
 
12/12

Data, 4
  undated
 
12/13

Data and Averages
  undated
 
12/14

Data on EIM-activated membranes
  1974
 
12/15

Data on EIM-activated membranes
  July, 1971
 
12/16

Equations and Proofs
  undated
 
12/17

Figures
  undated
 
12/18

Figures and Tables
  undated
 
12/19

Delta G versus Y
  undated
 
12/20

J.A. Hornbeck and P.W Foy, “Ohmic Contacts as a Source of Reverse Saturation Currents in p-n Junctions,” paper abstract
  1952
 
12/21

Index Refraction
  undated
 
12/22

Inductance, 1
  undated
 
12/23

Inductance, 2
  undated
 
12/24

KCl data
  undated
 
12/25

KFl/KBr/(CH3)4HCl/NH4Cl
  undated
 
12/26

K2SO4
  undated
 
12/27

Lipids, 1
  undated
 
12/28

Lipids, 2
  undated
 
12/29

Microscopic Examination of the Copper-Cuprous Oxide Interface of Copper-Oxide Varistors, with Plates
  undated
 
12/30

Miscellaneous Experiments
  undated
 
12/31

NaCl
  undated
 
12/32

Nerves
  undated
 
12/33

Optical Constants of Ge Papers
  undated
 
12/34

Optical Thickness
  undated
 
12/35

Optical Thickness
  undated
 
12/36

Patent Application number 11,165 (Continuation of Transistor)
  undated
 
12/37

Patent Application Infra-Red Detectors and Recorder
  1962
 
12/38

Patent Application
  November 14, 1955
 
12/39

Patents 1 to 6
  undated
 
12/40

Patents 1-7, 3-9 (Brattain- Bardeen)
  undated
 
12/41

Patents 4-11, 5-12, 6-13 (Brattain – Bardeen)
  undated
 
12/42

Patent – Three Electrode Circuit (John Bardeen and Walter Brattain)
  1950
 
12/43

Insulators
  undated
 
13/1

Progress Reports
  1929
 
13/2

Notebook Inventories
  undated
 
13/3

“The Results of a Study of the Current Voltage Characteristics of Cu2O Rectifier Unit”
  1935
 
13/4

Rhodium Plating
  undated
 
13/5

Germanium Etches
  undated
 
13/6

Salt Bias
  undated
 
13/7

Silicon
  undated
 
13/8

Silicon n and k Data
  undated
 
13/9

Silicon Rectifier
  undated
 
13/10

Silicon Reports, etc.
  undated
 
13/11

Theory of Semiconductors and Rectification
  undated
 
13/12

Transmissions Through Thin Films
  undated
 
13/13

“A Vacuum System for Vaporization of Metal Contacts onto Contact Oxide Varistors”
  1937
 
13/14

Vapor Pressure
  undated
 
13/15

Lab Notebooks
  undated
 
45/2

Membrane Data Charts
  1977
   
Sub-series 6:  Honors, Awards, and Recognitions
 
 
13/16

Awards and Certificates
  1953-1966
 
13/17

Defense Science Board
  1966
 
13/18

Nobel Science Hall Dedication, Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota
  1963
 
13/19

Washington Centennial Hall of Honor Catalog
  1989
 
13/20

University of Oregon Alumnus of the Year Award
  1976
 
13/21

University of Minnesota Honorary Doctor of Science Degree
  1957
 
13/22

Nobel Prize Announcement
  1956
 
13/23

Nobel Prize Ceremony Invitation
  1956
 
13/24

Nobel Transistor Demonstration Materials
  1956
 
13/25

Nobel Ceremony Activities
  1956
 
13/26

Nobel Trip Expenses
  1956
 
13/27

Nobel Laureates Dinner at White House
  1962
 
13/28

Recognitions and Articles
  1966-1981
 
13/29

Retirement, Bell Labs
  1967
 
13/30

Correspondence with Sweden before and after Nobel Trip
  1956 – 1957
 
13/31

Correspondence List for Nobel Congratulations
  undated
 
13/32

Nobel Prize Congratulations and Clippings
  1956
 
13/33

Nobel Prize Clippings and Anniversary Celebrations
  1956-1982
 
13/34

Nobel Laureate Day Photo Album
  1957
 
14/1

American Institute of Physics
  1957
 
14/2

Awards
  1925, 1953
 
14/3

Brain Life Research Foundation
  1982
 
14/4

Federation of American Scientists
  1959
 
14/5

Franklin Institute
  1952
 
14/6

Franklin Institute - Stuart Ballantine Medal
  1952
 
14/7

National Inventors Hall of Fame
  1974-1975
 
14/8

Washington State Historical Society Hall of Honor
  1981
 
14/9

Historical Library and Museum of Science and Technology
  1957
 
14/10

International Conference on the Unity of the Sciences (ICUS)
  1978-1981
 
14/11

ICUS & Reverend Sun Myung Moon
  1975-1976
 
14/12

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Awards
  1981
 
14/13

International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP)
  1968-1973
 
14/14

International Union of Pure and Applied Physics 50th anniversary
  1972
 
14/15

International Union of Pure and Applied Physics, General Information and Report of the General assembly
  1963
 
14/16

International Union of Pure and Applied Physics
  1965
 
14/17

USA National Committee of International Union of Pure and Applied Physics
  1965-1969
 
14/18

Joint Center for Graduate Study Advisory Committee
  1973
 
14/19

Land Grant College Dinner
  1961
 
14/20

Museum of Science and Industry – Nobel
  1980
 
14/21

National Academy of Sciences
  1965-1971
 
14/22

National Academy of Sciences – Members Directory
  1981
 
14/23

National Academy of Sciences Pamphlets
  1970-1982
 
14/24

National Academy of Sciences
  1974
 
14/25

National Academy of Sciences
  1975 – 1977
 
14/26

National Academy of Sciences
  1979
 
14/27

National Science Foundation
  1980
 
14/28

Portland Rotary Club
  1966
 
14/29

John Scott Medal clippings
  1955
 
14/30

Semiconductor Equipment and Materials Institute (SEMI)
  1977
 
14/31

Sigma Xi
  1966-1970
 
15/1

Stoics 1
  1966-1977
 
15/2

Stoics 2
  1962-1966
 
15/3

Stoics 3
  1962-1964
 
15/4

Walla Walla Chamber of Commerce Award - Clippings
  1957
 
15/5

Bell Advancement
  1964
 
15/6

Bell Telephone Laboratories Press Releases with Photographs
  1954
 
15/7

Bell Laboratories Publications
  1948-1983
 
15/8

Bell Laboratories News 1
  1968-1982
 
15/9

Bell Laboratories News 2
  1962-1975
 
15/10

Fortune
  1958
 
15/11

Magazine Articles about Walter Brattain
  1956-1968
 
15/12

Battelle Memorial Institute
  1969-1972
 
15/13

Official Transcript Nobel Conference Proceedings – Shaping the Future
  1971
 
15/14

Convocation of Nobel Laureates
  1981
 
15/15

Nobel Announcement
  1956
 
15/16

Nobel Dedication
  1963
 
15/17

Nobel Laureates White House Dinner
  1962
 
15/18

Nobel Photo – Prized Minds
  undated
 
15/19

“Nobel Prize for Physics”
  1956
 
15/20

Reproduction of Alfred Nobel’s Signature
  undated
 
15/21

Swedish Newspaper Clippings for Nobel Awards
  1956
 
15/22

Alexander Dees De Sterio, Nobelpreistrager in Lindau
  1964
 
15/23

Erich Bagge, Die Nobelpreistrager der Physik
  1964
 
15/24

Alexander Dees De Sterio, Nobel fuhrte sie zusammen Begegnungun in Lindau, signed by Walter Brattain
  1975
 
16/1

Scrapbook Album, Texas Instruments Dedication, Walter Brattain Honored Guest
  1958
 
16/2-4

Scrapbooks, Retirement from Bell Labs, 3 Volumes
  1967
 
45/3

Naval Research Advisory Committee certificate of membership
  1960
 
45/4

Life magazine article: Nobel Winners at White House Dinner
  1962
 
45/8

Diplomas, Certificates and Awards
  1917-1984

 

Series 3.:  Reference Materials, 1860-1989

6 linear feet6 boxes
This series consists of science articles and subject files collected by Walter Brattain, reflecting his professional and personal interests. Some files also contain related correspondence.
 
 
Container(s)
Description
Dates
 
box/folder
16/5


Robert E. Ackerman, “Report to National Academy of Sciences: Senior Scientist Exchange Program to the U.S.S.R.
  undated
 
16/6

Artificial Heart Program
  1966
 
16/7

Astronomy articles
  1964-1967
 
16/8

Auroral Plasma Experimental Papers
  1977
 
16/9

Basic Constants
  undated
 
16/10

Hanford 200 Bev accelerator
  1965-1970
 
16/11

“Bioelectric Control of Bioluminescence in the Dinoflagellate Noctiluca”
  1965
 
16/12

C.G.B. Garrett, “Surface Thermodynamics”
  undated
 
16/13

Benjamin Brown, Whitman College professor
  1981
 
16/14

Tektronix, “A Practical Approach to Transistor and Vacuum Tube Amplifiers”
  1967
 
16/15

“Conductance of the Sodium Channel in Mylinated Nerve Fibers with Modified Sodium Inactivation”
  1976
 
16/16

“The Work Required to Remove an Electron from a Conducting Sphere”
  undated
 
16/17

Cordiner Hall Acoustics
  1965-1972
 
16/18

Copper Oxide Material
  1969-1976
 
16/19

Student Dissent
  1969
 
16/20

DNA
  1961-1964
 
16/21

Drell Report – Arms Control
  1977
 
16/22

“Drugs and Transport Processes”
  undated
 
16/23

Earth Weighing Machine, including photograph
  undated
 
17/1

Ecological Crises Readings
  1965-1970
 
17/2

Ecology Copies
  1975-1976
 
17/3

“The Electrical Activity of the Nervous System”
  1964
 
17/4

Energy and Ecology, including notes by Brattain
  1967-1975
 
17/5

Energy Per Bit
  1970
 
17/6

Energy Policy
  1977
 
17/7

Environment
  1969-1973
 
17/8

Genetic Codes
  undated
 
17/9

Germanium
  1961-1966
 
17/10

Hodgkin – Huxley articles
  1952
 
17/11

“Ion Transport Across the Lipid Membranes: A Critical Discussion of Mechanism in Selected Systems”
  1972
 
17/12

“Ion Transport Through Excitability-Inducing Material (EIM) Channels in Lipid Bilayer Membranes”
  1972
 
17/13

Karl Jansky—search for intelligent life, photographs of Bell Laboratories
  undated
 
17/14

“Schottky’s Theories of Dry Solid Rectifiers”
  1944
 
17/15

Professor Sergey Kalashnikov, exchange visit to Walla Walla
  1967
 
17/16

“Kinetic Characteristics of the Excitability- Inducing Material Channel in Oxidized Cholesterol and Brain Lipids Bilayer Membranes”
  1975
 
17/17

“Kinetics of the Opening and Closing of Individual Excitability- Inducing Material Channel in a Lipid Bilayer”
  1974
 
17/18

Benjamin Brown, A Little Astronomy pamphlet
  1927
 
17/19

A. H. Madjid Articles – Crystals
  1972
 
17/20

“The Logic of Measurement in Quantum Physics”
  undated
 
17/21

Metallurgy
  1948, 1970
 
17/22

“Molecular Model-Potentials: Combination of Atomic Boxes”
  undated
 
17/23

Mueller and Rudin—Bimolecular Lipid Membranes
  1962-1976
 
17/24

“The Nature of the Negative Resistance in Bimolecular Lipid Membranes Containing Excitability-Inducing Material”
  1970
 
17/25

The Nature of Science
  1976
 
17/26

National Geographic article: “Those Inventive Americans,” including section on transistor
  1970-1971
 
17/27

Pacific Science Center
  1979-1980
 
17/28

Plate Tectonics
  1961-1971
 
17/29

Research in Science Education
  1978-1980
 
17/30

“Resting Potentials, Action Potentials, and Potassium Selectivity in Experimental Bimolecular Lipid Membrane”
  1966, 1980-1981
 
17/31

Science Articles
  1970-1973
 
17/32

Benjamin Brown, “Seeing Walla Walla First”
  undated
 
17/33

Semiconductor Bibliography
  1945
 
17/34

Solid-State Physics History
  1979
 
17/35

“Stability of the Myelin Membrane”
  1965
 
17/36

Benjamin Brown, “The State-line Earthquake at Milton and Walla Walla”
  1936
 
17/37

Thermistor Bolometers
  1946
 
17/38

Thermistor Reports
  1947
 
17/39

Thermistor – High Speed
  1946
 
17/40

Time Charts
  undated
 
17/41

Tungsten
  1925-1927
 
18/1

John Bardeen Biography of Walter Brattain
  1989
 
18/2

Biographical and Bibliographical Information
  1945-1981
 
18/3

Biography
  undated
 
18/4

Current Biography – Who’s News & Why
  1957
 
18/5

New Book of Knowledge Articles (Biography & Discovery of the Transistor)
  1947-1978
 
18/6

Who’s Who Biography
  1974-1981
 
18/7

Campbell Gay - story
  undated
 
18/8

Foreign Clippings
  1956-1971
 
18/9

Nobel Articles (not related to Brattain)
  1978, undated
 
18/10

A Nobel Laureate and his Nobel Laureate Friends
  1977
 
18/11

Personal News
  1958
 
18/12

Post Nobel Articles about Brattain
  1955-1960
 
18/13

Post – Nobel News
  1961-1977
 
18/14

Post – Retirement Research and Opinions
  1959-1979
 
18/15

Recent Visitors to the Laboratories
  1955
 
18/16

Rock & Roll Regret
  1980
 
18/17

Alumni Funds
  1978-1979
 
18/18

Alumni Funds
  1980
 
18/19

Drive for Brown Chair of Physics
  1957
 
18/20

Faculty – Governing Boards Conference
  1966
 
18/21

Four Horsemen Reunion
  1974
 
18/22

Retirement to Whitman - Clippings
  1967
 
18/23

Small College Promotion
  1971
 
18/24

Tributes to Brown
  1967
 
18/25

Trustees and Overseers
  1968-1976
 
18/26

Whitman College Alumni Association Appreciation Awards
  1980
 
18/27

“Whitman Scientists” – address by William Fairbank
  1981
 
18/28

Why Whitman?
  1958-1979
 
18/29

Amoy Club Rulebooks
  1898, 1902
 
18/30

John Bardeen
  1968
 
18/31

John Bardeen Biography, Encyclopedia Americana
  1965
 
18/32

Brattain School article and photographs
  undated
 
18/33

Harold Brown Inaugural Address
  1969
 
18/34

Bulletin of the College of Engineering National Chiao Tung University
  1971 – 1972
 
18/35

Census of Lane County Oregon
  1860
 
18/36

Colleagues’ Addresses
  undated
 
18/37

College Related Clippings (not Whitman)
  1952-1964
 
18/38

Electoral College
  1969
 
18/39