During the course of its 100-plus year history, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has had some researchers and scientists known to be colorful characters who were also pioneers in their fields. For computer scientist Karen Olsen, one scientist who stands out was Ethel Marden.
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In the 1950s, Marden wrote programs for the nation’s first internally programmed digital computer: the Standards Eastern Automatic Computer (SEAC). For 13 years, SEAC was a valuable tool used by various government agencies to do everything from accounting to checking calculations for the hydrogen bomb. It led to several innovations, including electric typewriters and the digital scanner, which was used to create the first digital image.
“Marden inspires me because she and I are both computer scientists,” says Olsen. “But I was also intrigued that she and her husband lived in a home designed by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright that was perched on a cliff above a stretch of rapids on the Potomac River. She set a world record for scuba diving, crossed the Atlantic with her husband in a sailboat; [she] was an airplane pilot and lived to be 100 years old.”
Marden is also credited for successfully lobbying NIST to allow family-friendly, part-time and flex-time work schedules. Marden worked at NIST from 1948 to 1971. She was a vibrant character, as was her husband, Luis Marden, a globe-trotting photographer and writer for National Geographic. He pioneered underwater color photography in collaboration with oceanographer Jacques Cousteau. He also discovered the sunken H.M.S. Bounty, the 18th-century British ship portrayed in the movie Mutiny on the Bounty.
“Ethel Marden taught many of us how to program the [SEAC], but she also taught us many of the finer points of life,” noted former NIST computer programmer Genevie Hawkins Urban during a 2001 interview. “She instructed us in scuba diving; she herself was an avid scuba diver and held the women’s world record in 1954 for a depth of 165 feet. She showed us how much fun riding in her MG could be, how to open an English muffin so that all the crevices would be there to catch the butter, which wines were good and which to serve with various foods, [and] how to properly serve brandy to get the full aroma—indeed, all the little things that create the good life. The Mardens unveiled their Frank Lloyd Wright house design in 1951, and there were daily reports of the compromises or noncompromises between architect and client. It was 1956 before we had a picnic on the cornerstone.”
In 1983, Marden was interviewed about her involvement with the SEAC. She spoke of the excitement and dedication of the NIST researchers who worked on the groundbreaking project: “Every day when we went into the office, I think all of us went in with joy in our hearts because we loved our work,” recalled Marden. “We were doing something nobody had done before, and we were all excited about our work.... Many, many nights, engineers would be there all night. There was no question of payment for any overtime. The group never wanted or asked for overtime pay. [The] motivation is hard to understand unless you have worked in a pioneering environment where you feel you’re developing something new and exciting, and can hardly bear to leave it to go home.”
“I admire anyone who has done something for the first time... anyone who has been a pioneer in something,” said Marden during an interview after she retired.
Olsen applies that inspirational quote to NIST’s mission today: “As did Marden, I feel NIST is on the brink of new technologies,” says Olsen. “We have the capability to be pioneers.”
First published March 22, 2016, on NIST's Taking Measure blog.
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