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Download Ebook Tuxedo Park : A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II, by Jennet Conant

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Tuxedo Park : A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II, by Jennet Conant

Tuxedo Park : A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II, by Jennet Conant


Tuxedo Park : A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II, by Jennet Conant


Download Ebook Tuxedo Park : A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II, by Jennet Conant

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Tuxedo Park : A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II, by Jennet Conant

Review

Jonathan Yardley The Washington Post Remarkable...the story of a genuinely extraordinary man [told] uncommonly well.Kurt Vonnegut A brilliant account of the all but vanished reputation of an amateur physicist who became a friend and peer of the greatest scientists of his time.Timothy Ferris Jennet Conant's Tuxedo Park illuminates an important but little-known chapter in American science, and does it with a deft, knowing touch that brings it to life.The Washington Post Book World The story of how radar made its passage from the drawing board into the cockpits of Allied fighter planes is incredibly dramatic, and Jennet Conant tells it uncommonly well.The Wall Street Journal Understanding just how America wins wars is a pressing task these days, which makes the story of Alfred Loomis especially timely -- and instructive....[His] remarkable story is being told now only thanks to Ms. Conant, a journalist who combines a graceful writing style with her own family connections to his secretive life.

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About the Author

Jennet Conant is the author of Man of the Hour: James B. Conant, Warrior Scientist and the New York Times bestsellers The Irregulars: Roald Dahl and the British Spy Ring in Wartime Washington and Tuxedo Park: A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II. She has written for Vanity Fair, Esquire, GQ, Newsweek, and The New York Times. She lives in New York City and Sag Harbor, New York.

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Product details

Paperback: 352 pages

Publisher: Simon & Schuster (May 6, 2003)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0684872889

ISBN-13: 978-0684872889

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 1 x 8.4 inches

Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.4 out of 5 stars

260 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#54,068 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

This is a book about the most important contributor to the development of radar and the atomic bomb that you have never heard of. Who the hell was Alfred Lee Loomis? Secret palace of science that changed the course of WWII, seriously? I picked this up at a used book store in 2002. I was in no hurry to read it so it sat on my shelf for a few years. How could this be really significant? I thought I knew all that was necessary to understand the technological and scientific developments that helped win that terrible war. Boy, was I wrong!Alfred Loomis was intimately involved with the development of the two most critical technologies responsible for the allied victory in World War II: radar and the atomic bomb. The story of the atomic bomb is well known but the story of radar has not been widely told. Jennet Conant has put together a gripping tale that is full of surprises.As a successful and wealthy financier Alfred Loomis owned property in the New York state gated community called Tuxedo Park. The tuxedo was named for the community not the other way round. That is where the “secret palace of science” was located. Loomis bought a second home called the Tower House and dedicated it solely to the pursuit of science. Better equipped than what universities had at the time, it became a haven for visiting scientists to do their own research and research that Alfred Loomis was interested in. His collaborators included the well-respected American physicist Dr Robert Wood and Ukrainian-American chemist George Kistiakowsky (later responsible for the implosion method of detonation for the plutonium bomb). Loomis also hosted scientific conferences and the best in their fields came to give talks. It was Albert Einstein who dubbed the house a “palace of science.” Among those who came to Tuxedo Park was Earnest Lawrence. He arrived in 1936 to meet Loomis, see the “palace of science,” and to perhaps see about arranging some funding for his scientific work. Lawrence had been working on a device called a cyclotron for several years and he was trying to get funding for a larger device. Not only was Loomis interested in the cyclotron but he and Lawrence became immediate friends. Loomis sponsored Lawrence’s work and the cyclotron would become a pivotal piece of equipment in the quest to build an atomic bomb; it also got Lawrence a Nobel Prize in 1939.As a prominent and highly successful financier of public utility projects Loomis had important contacts in the business world. As a successful amateur physicist with his own state-of-the-art laboratory he had important contacts in academia. One of those contacts, MIT president Karl Compton, suggested that Loomis begin to investigate radar early in 1939. As the threat of war descended over Europe Loomis was casting about for something important to become involved in. Even though a solid Republican Loomis was not an isolationist. He would do everything he could to make sure America was prepared for defense and, if necessary, war. He remembered how difficult it had been for America during WW I. So, by 1939 Loomis was involved in both Lawrence’s cyclotron and radar. Lawrence would have most probably built his 184 inch cyclotron without Loomis’s help but Loomis’s financial support made everything move faster. Lawrence enjoyed bouncing all his ideas off Loomis. They were so close that Loomis actually had a desk at Lawrence’s Berkeley Radiation Lab. It quickly became clear that radar would not progress until a powerful beam of very short wave, 10 cm or less, radiation could be produced. All the devices designed in America were not powerful enough. This is where the astonishing Tizard Mission enters the story. Britain, now at complete industrial capacity, no longer had the ability to add new programs of production. They had newly invented devices that would dramatically improve her war fighting ability but needed the help of the US to put them into the hands of the war fighters. The mission arrived in the US in September of 1940 with one particularly amazing device, the cavity magnetron. The cavity magnetron makes modern radar possible. The British mission met with Loomis and he immediately knew that the magnetron changed everything and he went to work. Almost overnight, by the force of his determination, using his connections in government, industry and academia, using his personal wealth, Loomis started the Radiation Lab at MIT. Lawrence, who had never been politically involved, suddenly became motivated to work in radar. He immediately contacted physicists all over the country to come work on radar and they all said yes. Astonishing! Even before the US was involved in the war Lawrence and Loomis were able to get the top physicists to drop their research and come to newly constructed facilities at MIT and begin work on an enterprise none had ever tried or considered before. It was a startling success.When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor the Army had an experimental radar station on Oahu. It was a very large beast with a monstrous antenna and operated at wavelengths in the meter range. It was so experimental their warnings of incoming unknown planes were ignored and the attack on 7 December took US forces by surprise. By the time of the naval battles in the waters around Guadalcanal in November of 1942, less than a year later, much smaller, more powerful and more accurate devices had been installed on the Navy’s ships. Devices had been installed aboard Navy and Army aircraft to track down and kill German subs off the east and gulf coasts of America. This fantastic success is a testament to the indomitable efforts of Loomis and Lawrence and the American (some European refugees too) scientists who came to their call. One of my favorite contributors is Columbia physics professor I.I. Rabi (physics Nobel Prize in 1944). He became head of radar research and when a new proposal for another use for radar was suggested Rabi would always ask, “How many Germans will it kill?” When the atomic bomb project finally started moving forward Oppenheimer began poaching physicists from the radar project. He really wanted Rabi but Rabi refused. He thought radar was more critical to the war effort and he thought the bomb could not be completed in time to matter. However he was too important to be left out of that effort and was made a consultant on the bomb project, the only person to commute from the radar project to the Los Alamos site during the war. He was present for the Trinity test.The race to begin work on an atomic bomb had been horribly delayed by the ineptitude of Lyman Briggs, the one Roosevelt charged with investigating the possibility. Briggs should have immediately brought it to the attention of the National Academy of Sciences but he didn’t. He sat on it. He did nothing. It was Lawrence who, after becoming dismayed by the delay, began to investigate the possibility on his own in 1940. Lawrence did think uranium could be used to make a bomb and his team of scientists at Berkeley, using the cyclotron, discovered two new transuranic elements: neptunium and plutonium. Lawrence was convinced plutonium could also be used to make a bomb. Still nothing happened with Briggs. Finally British physicist Mark Oliphant came to the US in the summer of 1941. He was a member of a British committee looking into the possibility of an atomic bomb (he also worked on the cavity magnetron) and their assessment was it could and should be done. Briggs had ignored their report and Oliphant wanted to know why. Finally, because of Oliphant, after all that time wasted, the atomic bomb project began to move forward. Finally in the summer of 1942 locations for a site to be used to construct an atomic bomb were scouted. It could have, and should have, happened in the summer of 1941. I think that was a tragedy. Think what might have resulted from an atomic bomb ready for use in August of 1944 instead of 1945. In August of 1944 the Western Allies were still tied up in Normandy. So much death and destruction could have been avoided if Britain and America could have rained atomic bombs on Germany.This book is primarily a biography of Alfred Loomis describing his upbringing, education, personal life, how he amassed a fortune, became a scientist and a prime participant in the two most critical technological enterprises of the Second World War. We have never heard of him before because he wanted it that way. He did not seek fame or fortune from any of his discoveries and inventions, like Loran navigation. After the war he insisted that the MIT lab be closed. It had been necessary for government to become involved in radar because of the war. Now, after the war, it should go to industry. And a billion dollar industry would be created. In 1945 it would be accidentally discovered by a Raytheon engineer (Raytheon was one of the companies that built radar sets for the military) that microwaves can heat food, another industry was born. And, in 1947, experimenting with microwaves beamed at hydrogen, Willis Lamb would discover the Lamb Shift, greatly further the understanding of quantum electrodynamics and win a Nobel Prize. The cavity magnetron made all that possible. It was the extraordinary collaboration between Britain and the US that won the war and greatly influenced progress in science, industry and the quality of life.There is a very personal reason Jennet Conant wrote this book: her grandfather, James B Conant, was director of the National Defense Research Committee that oversaw the radar and atomic bomb projects, among others. There is also another family connection that ties directly into the Loomis “palace of science.” It is a very interesting and tragic part of the tale that the author opens this book with. In all I got an extremely fascinating story of the development of radar and the atomic bomb as well as an extremely fascinating look into the life of the man who contributed so much to making those efforts a success: Alfred Lee Loomis. Everyone should read this outstanding book!I have been deeply interested in how it was America, profoundly resistant to becoming involved in another European war, was actually so prepared to fight by the first year of the war. It is fashionable among historians to tout the dismally small size of the US Army in 1939 and put that forward to demonstrate America’s unpreparedness. And it was true, in 1939 the US Army was pathetic. But it is also true that by 1942, the first year of the war, America was suddenly ready. Not completely ready but able to take the offensive by that first year. Even with the losses at Pearl Harbor the US Navy was ready, two new fast battleships entered action at Guadalcanal by November of 1942. The four carriers lost in 1942 were replaced in 1943. The Army had the men and amphibious craft necessary to launch a major assault on North Africa in November of 1942. And radar was ready in 1942! The atomic bomb project began in 1942 and my research shows me that represents a late start but many don’t see it that way. Jennet Conant’s book is a fabulous contribution to understanding how so many Americans saw the coming storm and made sure America was ready.For more on the Tizard Mission see The Tizard Mission: The Top-Secret Operation That Changed the Course of World War II by Stephen PhelpsFor more on US / British cooperation see Eisenhower's Armies: The American-British Alliance during World War II by Niall Barr

This is a fascinating peek into the life of brilliant and reclusive millionaire, whose contributions to the US army technology made it possible to defeat the Nazis in the WWII (at least on the Western Front). I've never heard of Alfred Lee Loomis before, and it's amazing how man possessing a rare combination of financial, scientific and engineering brilliance could slip so easily under the mainstream history's radar (sorry for the pun).While not exactly a full-fledged biography, the book does a good job chronicling Loomis's career as an extremely successful businessman (he was able to predict the stock market crash and survive the Great Depression with virtually no damage to his fortune), his abrupt, unlikely switch to engineering pursuits and the subsequent rise to scientific prominence. Loomis's work led to the development of radar technology that helped thwart German U-boats and bombers during the WWII, and the book helps put his contributions in a proper spotlight showing that they were just as important as creation of atomic bomb and cracking of the Enigma code. My only gripe is that the book sometimes throws a lot of technical details and lingo at you without really bothering to explain what all of it means; so, a bit of supplementary reading might be required. On the other hand, little details and anecdotes pertaining to personal life and characters of Loomis and his circle of friends, relatives and colleagues also abound, so even if you don't particularly care for nuts-and-bolts of physics, you're unlikely to stay bored for too long. Recommended!

What a great book! Though this book is not actually about WW-II, if you think you know how we won WW-II you may be very interested of what actually went on behind the scenes here is the US scientific community and how this one man's wealth, love of science and philanthropy enabled the US' victory. Loomis' Tower House laboratory literally either invented, paved the way or facilitated breakthroughs from spectroscopy, encephalography and precision chronography to RADAR (and even the fission weapon that cost 40K+ Japanese lives to save 2.1 million US and allied lives and effectively ended WW-I) by gather some of the greatest minds in world with the lure of having access to some of the finest laboratory equipment on earth and the funding to pursue their scientific interests -- From Bohr to Heisenurg to Lawrence to Einstein and many dozens of other notables, and from his personal service in WW-II in the field and, more notably, as the head of Research at the US Aberdeen Proving Grounds. Most of the accounts in this book are via intensive document research (has an extensive bibliography) and via the diaries of other researchers, family and friends and many accounts are direct quotations from those sources. Ironically, since Alfred Lee Loomis never had interest in drawing attention to himself n or his wealth-gathering years, his single-minded focus on science and one breakthrough after another, effectively excluded him from the history books. There is also much insight into the doings of high-society in the 20s and 30s since Tower House was actually located in the exclusive enclave of Tuxedo Park -- home to dozens of the most wealthy in the US. Tower House is still there, now housing the (private) Vacuum Tube Museum. So, while this book is clearly a biography of Alfred Lee Loomis, it is also a vital work in understanding this country's history, society, science and also why the free enterprise system is the only vehicle that could have possibly permitted a single man to so profoundly impact the betterment of this science and, through that, the this country and, arguably, the betterment of all mankind. I'm not a novel reader at all -- I am much more comfortable reading science and nature magazines and some journals, however this book painted a heretofore unpaved road underneath the players and breakthroughs in the world of science in a way I found both engaging and satisfying. If you share similar interests by all means read it! And if you just like history and/or a better understanding of the just how some key science came to be, you will also like this book. There are a lot of characters and the Prologue and first chapter do set the stage, but it can be a easy to get a little lost in the names, yet it's writing with appropriate 'tie-backs' direct and parenthetical) that you will not likely get lost for long. Buy it!!

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