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Walter H.G. Paul papers

 Record Group
Identifier: MC-117

Content Description

The papers consist of notebooks, talks, reports, lecture transparencies and electronic media relating to buoy and mooring design and testing.

Dates

  • Creation: 1979-2011

Conditions Governing Access

Open: materials are available for research.

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright: Permission to publish material from the collection must be authorized by the Institution Archivist.

Biographical / Historical

Walter was born on September 27, 1935 in Vegesack, Germany, the eldest of four siblings.

Walter received his master’s degree in mechanical engineering/economics in 1961 from University of Darmstadt in Germany. In 1967, he received his Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the University of Hannover in Germany.

Between the period of 1961-1974 Walter worked at fiber rope factories in Germany and the US as a plant, test, and field application engineer, and in research facilities specializing in the testing of fiber ropes and fishing net twines. Most notable among these was his work at Gleistein, a rope manufacturer and family business originally founded in 1824.

1974 to 1993 he was employed as a senior departmental staff engineer by Martin Marietta, Aero and Naval Systems Division, Ocean System Operation, the former Chesapeake Instrument Corporation and Gould, Inc. in Glen Burnie, MD. There he had design responsibility for all rope and hose strength members and tow cables used in towed array and towed antenna systems built at the company for the US Navy.

Walter began his career at WHOI in 1993 as a senior engineer in the AOPandE Department. He retired in 2004 but remained on casual status until 2015.

Walter worked on mooring technology at WHOI with a group that included Dan Frye, John Kemp, Mark Grosenbaugh, and Don Peters. Walter brought hose technology to mooring applications in projects such as the Surface Suspended Acoustic Receiver (SSAR), automated right whale detection moorings and most of the Ocean Observatories Initiative Coastal Moorings in the Pioneer and Endurance arrays. He was an expert on steel and synthetic tension members and played a significant part in WHOI engineering for several decades.

Walter was chair of the Marine Technology Society (MTS) Buoy Technology Committee and ran the Buoy Workshop for many years. He held this position from 1993 until 2014, where he helped organize his last workshop in San Diego, CA.

Walter was a member of the Cordage Institute, member of its Technical Committee; The Fiber Society; Organizer of Buoy Technology Workshops, sponsored by the Office of Naval Research (ONR) and MTS. The workshops are held every two years since 1996.

Walter H. G. Paul died on December 8, 2018 in Falmouth, Mass. He was 82.

Extent

5 Linear Feet (4 boxes) : includes videotapes (VHS), zip disks, floppy disks, data cartridges and CD/DVD-ROMs

Language

English

Arrangement

Arranged in two series: Subject Files and Digital and Magnetic Media.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Received as acc-2019-11. Materials were transferred with the assistance of Paula Eissmann.

Title
A Guide to the the Walter H.G. Paul papers, 1979-2011
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script

Repository Details

Part of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Data Library and Archives Repository

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