PHOTO COURTESY OF AT&T ARCHIVES AND HISTORY CENTER
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At 4:15 a.m. on 11 December 1971, firemen
extinguishing an automobile blaze in the New Jersey
hamlet of Neshanic Station were shocked to discover a
badly charred body slumped face-down in the back seat.
It proved to be the remains of Jack A. Morton, the vice
president of electronic technology at Bell Telephone
Laboratories, in Murray Hill, N.J. He had last been seen
talking with two men at the nearby Neshanic Inn just
before its 2 a.m. closing—about 100 meters from the
abandoned railroad tracks where his flaming Volvo sports
coupe was spotted. Local police quickly arrested and
booked the men for murder.
This gruesome slaying ended the stellar career of the
man who had led Bell Labs’ effort to transform the
transistor from a promising but rickety laboratory gizmo
into the sturdy, reliable commercial product that
eventually revolutionized electronics. During the 1950s
and 1960s, Bell Labs’ golden age, Morton served as
quarterback of the device development team, making
nearly all the key calls on which technologies to pursue
and which to forgo. He was a bold, forceful, decisive
manager who didn’t suffer fools gladly. And with some of
the world’s most intelligent and innovative researchers
working for him, he rarely had to.
Morton didn’t always make the right
decisions, however. As one of his former colleagues
observed, decisive leadership can easily become a flaw
rather than a virtue [see photos, “Flawed Hero”]. On
integrated circuits in particular, Morton exhibited
serious blind spots that cost the parent phone company,
AT&T, dearly—and may have contributed to its
eventual dismemberment. But his untimely death meant
that he would not be around to witness the consequences
of his choices.
Like so many
of the leading figures in the semiconductor
industry—John Bardeen, Nick Holonyak, Jack Kilby,
Robert Noyce—Jack Morton was born and raised in
America’s pragmatic heartland. After growing up in St.
Louis, he matriculated at Wayne University, in Detroit,
where he was a straight-A electrical engineering major
as well as quarterback of the football team. He was
avidly pursuing graduate work in the discipline at the
University of Michigan, intent on an academic career,
when Bell Labs research director Mervin Kelly happened
to visit in 1936. Kelly offered the promising young
engineer an R&D position. Morton accepted, planning
to pursue a Ph.D. in physics at Columbia University
simultaneously. At Bell Labs, he started the same year
as John Pierce, who would go on to pioneer satellite
communications; Claude Shannon, who would lay the
foundations for information theory; and William
Shockley, who would share the Nobel Prize for inventing
the transistor.
A visionary firebrand, Kelly had directed vacuum-tube
R&D at the Labs [see photos, “Early Promise”]. He was
keenly aware of the limitations of the bulky,
power-hungry devices and the problems with the
electromechanical relays then used as switches to
connect phone calls throughout the Bell System. He
envisioned a future when this switching would be done
completely by electronic means based on the solid-state
devices that were beginning to find applications in the
late 1930s. To realize his dream, he hired the best
scientists and engineers he could cajole into working in
an industrial laboratory.
World War II put the project on hold. Kelly played a
major wartime role, heading up radar development at Bell
Labs and the Western Electric Co., AT&T’s
manufacturing arm. Morton, too, did important military
work. Having plunged into the intricacies of microwave
circuit engineering just before the war, he helped
design a microwave amplifier circuit that extended the
range of radar systems and gave Allied forces in the
Pacific a key advantage.
After the war, Morton developed a peanut-size vacuum
triode that could amplify microwave signals. This
triode served at the heart of the transcontinental
microwave relay system that AT&T began building
during the late 1940s, and it continued to be used in
this capacity for decades, permitting coast-to-coast
transmission of television signals.