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Grace Murray Hopper
Computer pioneer and innovator
A
Legend in Her Own Time
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By Elizabeth
Dickason
Eighty-five-year-old Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper who
dedicated her life to the Navy passed away on 1January 1992. As
a pioneer Computer Programmer and co-inventor of COBOL, she was
known as the Grand Lady of Software, Amazing Grace and Grandma COBOL.
She'll be remembered for her now famous sayings, one of which is
"It's easier to ask forgiveness than it is to get permission."
It's only fitting that Grace Brewster Murray was born between two
such memorable events as the Wright Brothers' first successful power-driven
flight in 1903 and Henry Ford's introduction of the Model T in 1908.
Taught by her father at an early age to go after what she wanted,
Grace's life consisted of one success after another, including the
significant contributions she made to the computer age and the Navy.
Remembering Grace Murray Hopper: A Legend in Her Own Time
Young Grace's diligence and hard work paid off when in 1928 at the
age of 22 she was graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Vassar College.
She then attended Yale University, where she received an MA degree
in Mathematics and Physics in 1930 and a Ph.D. in Mathematics in
1934. Hopper began teaching mathematics at Vassar in 1931 where
her first year's salary was $800. She stayed there until she joined
the United States Naval Reserve in December 1943.
Upon graduation, she was commissioned a LTJG and ordered to the
Bureau of Ordnance Computation Project at Harvard University. There
she became the first programmer on the Navy's Mark I computer, the
mechanical miracle of its day. Hopper's love of gadgets caused her
to immediately fall for the biggest gadget she'd ever seen, the
fifty-one foot long, 8 foot high, 8 foot wide, glass-encased mound
of bulky relays, switches and vacuum tubes called the Mark I. This
miracle of modern science could store 72 words and perform three
additions every second.
Hopper's love affair with the Mark I ended in a few short years
when the UNIVAC I, operating a thousand times faster, won her affections.
In 1946 Hopper was released from active duty and joined the Harvard
Faculty at the Computation Laboratory where her work continued on
the Mark II and Mark III computers for the Navy. In 1949 she joined
the Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation in Philadelphia-later called
Sperry Rand-where she designed the first commercial large-scale
electronic computer called the UNIVAC I.
She changed the lives of everyone in the computer industry by developing
the Bomarc system, later called COBOL (common-business-oriented
language). COBOL made it possible for computers to respond to words
rather than numbers. Hopper often jokingly explained, "It really
came about because I couldn't balance my checkbook." She's
also credited with coining the term bug when she traced an error
in the Mark II to a moth trapped in a relay. The bug was carefully
removed and taped to a daily log book. Since then, whenever a computer
has a problem, it's referred to as a bug.
Hopper retired from the Naval Reserve with the rank of Commander
at the end of 1966. She was recalled to active duty in August of
1967 for what was supposed to be a six-month assignment at the request
of Norman Ream, then Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy
for Automatic Data Processing. After the six months were up, her
orders were changed to say her services would be needed indefinitely.
She was promoted to Captain in 1973 by Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.,
Chief of Naval Operations. And in 1977, she was appointed special
advisor to Commander, Naval Data Automation Command (NAVDAC), where
she stayed until she retired.
In 1983, a bill was introduced by Rep. Philip Crane (D-Ill.) who
said, "It is time the Navy recognized the outstanding contributions
made by this officer recalled from retirement over a decade and
a half ago and promote her to the rank of Commodore." Rep.
Crane became interested in Hopper after seeing her March 1983 60
Minutes interview. He'd never met Hopper, but after speaking with
several people, was convinced she was due the added status of being
a flag officer. The bill was approved by the House, and at the age
of 76, she was promoted to Commodore by special Presidential appointment.
Her rank was elevated to rear admiral in November 1985, making her
one of few women admirals in the history of the United States Navy.
On 27 September 1985, the Navy Regional Data Automation Center
(now the Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station), San Diego,
broke ground on a 135,577 square foot data processing facility,
The Grace Murray Hopper Service Center. The building contains a
data processing center as well as training facilities, teleconferencing
capabilities, telecommunications and expanded customer service areas.
A small room-sized museum contains numerous artifacts, awards and
citations that Hopper received during her lengthy career. The guest
visitor's book contains the names of some prominent people paying
homage to the computer pioneer. There is also a Grace Murray Hopper
Center for Computer Learning at Brewster Academy in Wolfeboro, New
Hampshire, where she spent her childhood summers.
In 1986, eighty-year-old Grace Hopper retired involuntarily from
the Navy. The ceremony was held in Boston on the USS Constitution,
fulfilling Hopper's final request before ending her Naval career.
Three hundred of her friends and admirers and thirty family members
were there to watch as the end came to her 43-year Naval career.
As then Secretary of the Navy John Lehman said in his speech, "I'm
reminded of that famous story by P.T. Barnum. About the turn of
the century, his principle attraction, the human cannonball, came
to P.T. Barnum and said, `Mr. Barnum, I just can't take it any longer.
Two performances a day and four on weekends are just too much. I'm
quitting.' Barnum said, `You can't possibly quit. Where will I find
someone else of your caliber?' They realized Hopper was irreplaceable.
In her retirement speech, instead of dwelling on the past, she
talked about moving toward the future, stressing the importance
of leadership. "Our young people are the future. We must provide
for them. We must give them the positive leadership they're looking
for...You manage things; you lead people." It was at her retirement
in 1986 that she was presented the highest award given by the Department
of Defense - the Defense Distinguished Service Medal - one of innumerable
awards she received from both the Navy and industry.
Other awards include the Navy Meritorious Service Medal, the Legion
of Merit and the National Medal of Technology, awarded last September
by President George Bush. She also received the first computer sciences
"man of the year" award from the Data Processing Management
Association (DPMA) in 1969. Other achievements include retiring
from the Navy as a Rear Admiral and the oldest serving officer at
that time, and being the first woman to be awarded a Ph.D. in Mathematics
from Yale University. For a CAPT Grace Hopper, Head of the Navy
Programming Section of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations
(OP-911F), at work in her office in August 1976. She was the first
Naval Reserve woman to be called back to active duty.more in-depth
list of her accomplishments, see the side bar on this page.
Retirement didn't slow Grace Hopper down. Shortly thereafter, she
became a Senior Consultant to Digital Equipment Corporation where
she was active until about 18 months before her death. She functioned
in much the same capacity she did when she was in the Navy, traveling
on lecture tours around the country, speaking at engineering forums,
colleges, universities and computer seminars passing on the message
that managers shouldn't be afraid of change. In her opinion, "the
most damaging phrase in the language is `We've always done it this
way.'"
Grace said in many of her speeches, "I always promise during
my talks that if anyone in the audience says during the next 12
months, 'But we've always done it that way,' I will immediately
materialize beside him and haunt him for the next 24 hours and see
if I could get him to take a second look." Embracing the unconventional,
the clock in her office ran counterclockwise.
Her favorite age group to address was young people between the
ages of 17 and 20. She believed they know more, they question more
and they learn more than people in what she called the "in-between
years", ages 40 to 45. She always placed very high importance
on America's youth. Hopper often said, "working with the youth
is the most important job I've done. It's also the most rewarding."
This seems perfectly natural since she spent all her adult life
teaching others.
Hopper was a big hit at the Navy Micro Conference. She loved to
tell the story of how the conference started because it supported
her famous saying, "It's always easier to ask forgiveness than
it is to get permission." Here's the story: A sailor in the
Pacific fleet built a computer aboard ship. A picture of the computer
appeared in Navy Times where a rear admiral saw it. He wrote the
sailor a letter of encouragement. The sailor decided to answer the
rear admiral directly, telling him exactly what was wrong with computers
in the Pacific fleet and what could be done using microcomputers.
(The computer mentality at that time was geared around mainframes.)
As events evolved, the sailor was transferred to the Navy Regional
Data Automation Center (NARDAC) in Norfolk, Virginia (now called
Naval Computer and Telecommunications Area Master Station LAN) where
his technical expertise could be fully utilized. He was part of
the team that birthed the first microcomputer conference in 1982.
A five point plan was developed that centered around the microcomputer
contracts. It provided other needed services for users, including
the ability to communicate via a conference.
What started off as a small seminar for 400 people the first year
has grown into a full-blown conference, averaging over a thousand
attendees every year. It wasn't until the third year that the conference
became completely legal.
Chips magazine is an offshoot of this same five point plan. In
an effort to communicate with even more microcomputer users, NARDAC
Norfolk decided to also start a newsletter, then called Chips Ahoy.
Neither Navy Micro nor Chips might have been started if someone
didn't take the initiative first, worrying about asking permission
later.
Grace Hopper was a keynote speaker for the conference in its earlier
years, drawing a standing-room-only crowd. Although she had a standard
keynote speech, stressing the same message over and over, people
were fascinated by her. Her lectures challenged management to keep
pace. The Navy Micro Conference still goes on today, alternating
between the east and west coasts, still stressing Hopper's unique
message to the world: Be innovative, open minded and give people
the freedom to try new things.
Hopper enchanted her audiences with tales of the computer evolution
and her uncanny ability to predict the trends of the future. Many
of her predictions came true right before her eyes as industry built
more powerful, more compact machines and developed the operating
systems and software that matched her visions. Some of her more
innovative ideas include using computers to track the lifecycle
of crop eating locusts, building a weather computer, managing water
reserves so that everyone would have a fair share and tracking the
waves at the bottom of the ocean. She also thought every ship should
have a computer that the crew could play with and learn to use.
I never met Grace Hopper, but I did see her at Navy Micro '87.
She passed by with her entourage, smoking a filterless Lucky Strike
cigarette as she often did. You could hear people whispering, "There
she is," as she passed by. My first impression of her was that
of a friendly, grandmotherly-type woman who looked almost frail.
Those words don't exactly describe the public side of Grace Hopper.
She was described by one reporter as a "feisty old salt who
gave off an aura of power." This held true in her dealings
with top brass, subordinates and interviewers - always interested
in getting to the bottom line.
One dream Hopper didn't fulfill was living to the age of 94. She
wanted to be here December 31, 1999 for the New Year's Eve to end
all New Year's Eve parties. She also wanted to be able to look back
at the early days of the computer and say to all the doubters, "See?
We told you the computer could do all that!"
Her insight into the future will stay with us even though she's
gone. Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper was laid to rest with full
military honors in Arlington National Cemetery.
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