Advertisement

Dr Norman Douglas Ham

Advertisement

Dr Norman Douglas Ham Famous memorial

Birth
Ontario, Canada
Death
13 Feb 2010 (aged 80)
Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
MIT Professor Emeritus Norman D. Ham SM '52, AE '57, ScD '68, an aeronautical engineer was internationally recognized for his expertise in helicopter rotor design. Known to many in the aeronautical industry as the "father of individual-blade-control," Ham contributed extensively to the rotorcraft community. A 1951 graduate of the University of Toronto, he received advanced degrees in aeronautics from MIT. After nearly a decade of work in the aircraft industry in Canada, he continued his career in the United Kingdom as senior engineer for the Fairey Aviation Co., focusing on the design of the Rotodyne compound helicopter. He returned to the United States, where he was employed by Doman Helicopters in Danbury, Conn., to assist in certification of the Model LZ-5 helicopter, a particularly unique design that was advanced for its time and was later incorporated into the V-22 Osprey. At Doman, he contributed to the design of the Doman-Fleet DF-7 for the Royal Canadian Navy. Ham joined the faculty of the MIT Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics in 1962. At MIT, he founded and directed the VTOL Technology Laboratory, and conducted pioneering research on dynamic stall, stall flutter, individual blade control and gust response for helicopter rotors. His skill as a lecturer at MIT was reflected in the warm and longstanding relationships he held with many of his former students up to the time of his death. Before and after Ham's retirement, industry leaders and litigators regularly solicited his technical knowledge. He consulted extensively for NASA and for aircraft companies including Boeing, Honeywell and Raytheon, and regularly presented papers for AHS International, a Vertical Flight Society. Ham wrote more than 40 scholarly papers and received numerous industry awards. In 1953, he won the Cierva Memorial Prize from the Helicopter Association of Great Britain. In 1995, he was recognized with a Certificate of Appreciation by the NASA Ames Research Center, and in 2001, he was honored by the American Helicopter Society for his outstanding achievements and contributions to vertical flight technology. In 2002, he was selected as an Honorary Member of the Society's Education Committee. A natural athlete, Ham played tennis regularly for most of his life and was a skilled competitive curler. His team represented Massachusetts at the Men's National Curling Championships in 1968 in Wisconsin and again in 1981 in Alaska, and he was chairman of Canadian Club of Boston Curling for many years. He was known by all for his thoughtful intellect, warm sense of humor and gentlemanly manner.
MIT Professor Emeritus Norman D. Ham SM '52, AE '57, ScD '68, an aeronautical engineer was internationally recognized for his expertise in helicopter rotor design. Known to many in the aeronautical industry as the "father of individual-blade-control," Ham contributed extensively to the rotorcraft community. A 1951 graduate of the University of Toronto, he received advanced degrees in aeronautics from MIT. After nearly a decade of work in the aircraft industry in Canada, he continued his career in the United Kingdom as senior engineer for the Fairey Aviation Co., focusing on the design of the Rotodyne compound helicopter. He returned to the United States, where he was employed by Doman Helicopters in Danbury, Conn., to assist in certification of the Model LZ-5 helicopter, a particularly unique design that was advanced for its time and was later incorporated into the V-22 Osprey. At Doman, he contributed to the design of the Doman-Fleet DF-7 for the Royal Canadian Navy. Ham joined the faculty of the MIT Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics in 1962. At MIT, he founded and directed the VTOL Technology Laboratory, and conducted pioneering research on dynamic stall, stall flutter, individual blade control and gust response for helicopter rotors. His skill as a lecturer at MIT was reflected in the warm and longstanding relationships he held with many of his former students up to the time of his death. Before and after Ham's retirement, industry leaders and litigators regularly solicited his technical knowledge. He consulted extensively for NASA and for aircraft companies including Boeing, Honeywell and Raytheon, and regularly presented papers for AHS International, a Vertical Flight Society. Ham wrote more than 40 scholarly papers and received numerous industry awards. In 1953, he won the Cierva Memorial Prize from the Helicopter Association of Great Britain. In 1995, he was recognized with a Certificate of Appreciation by the NASA Ames Research Center, and in 2001, he was honored by the American Helicopter Society for his outstanding achievements and contributions to vertical flight technology. In 2002, he was selected as an Honorary Member of the Society's Education Committee. A natural athlete, Ham played tennis regularly for most of his life and was a skilled competitive curler. His team represented Massachusetts at the Men's National Curling Championships in 1968 in Wisconsin and again in 1981 in Alaska, and he was chairman of Canadian Club of Boston Curling for many years. He was known by all for his thoughtful intellect, warm sense of humor and gentlemanly manner.

Bio by: Robert C. Peurifoy



Advertisement

Advertisement

How famous was Dr Norman Douglas Ham ?

Current rating: 4.1 out of 5 stars

10 votes

Sign-in to cast your vote.

  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Robert C. Peurifoy
  • Added: Oct 29, 2016
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/171979183/norman_douglas-ham: accessed ), memorial page for Dr Norman Douglas Ham (30 Sep 1929–13 Feb 2010), Find a Grave Memorial ID 171979183, citing Walnut Hills Cemetery, Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.