James W. Mavor, Jr. papers
Scope and Content Note
The papers consist mainly of Mavor's files concerning technical issues relating to Aluminaut , Alvin , and Lulu .
Dates
- Creation: 1949-1978
Language of Materials
The records are in
English.
Access
Open: materials are available for research.
Use
Copyright: Permission to publish material from the collection must be authorized by the Institution Archivist.
Biographical Information
James Watt Mavor, Jr. was born January 18, 1923 in
Schenectady, N.Y., where he attended grade school and junior high school. He was a student at the
Loomis School from 1937 to 1940 and at
Union College for a year before moving to the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1944 in naval architecture and marine engineering. During World War II Jim served in the
U.S. Navy in the
South Pacific, working as a drydocking and repair officer from 1944 to 1946 with a final rank of Lt. Jg. After the war he returned to
MIT to pursue graduate studies while also working as a naval architect for the David Taylor Model Basin from 1946 to 1948, and for the
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in submarine design from 1948 to 1949. After receiving a master's degree from MIT in naval architecture in 1950, Jim taught as an assistant professor of marine engineering at the
U.S. Naval Academy from 1950 to 1953, when he joined the faculty at
Northeastern University as an assistant professor of mechanical engineering. He was promoted to associate professor in 1957 and taught at the university until 1961. He also served as an instructor in naval architecture and as a consultant to
Bethlehem Steel at its
Quincy shipyard from 1957 to 1959. Jim's long connection to Woods Hole began as a child. His father, a biologist at
Union College, worked at
MBL during the summers and the family had a cottage on
Bar Neck Road. He recalled watching the arrival of the new Research Vessel
Atlantis
from
Denmark with his family in 1931. He continued to spend summers in
Woods Hole through the 1950s, and with his family became year-round residents in 1961. Jim joined the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution staff as a consultant in 1957 working in ocean engineering with
Harold Sawyer. In 1959 he moved to a casual basis as an associate in applied physics, and in 1961 became a full-time employee as a research associate in applied physics. He was promoted to research specialist in 1963, and continued working in
Ocean Engineering with early
Alvin
operations and other projects with
Scott Daubin and later
Earl Hays. During his WHOI career he was also active in the education programs of the Institution, serving on the graduate studies faculty from 1968 until he left the Institution in 1980. He also served as the Institution safety engineer from 1968 to 1973. He was a lecturer in the
Department of Ocean Engineering at MIT for many years, and served as a lecturer and staff member at the
Sea Education Association. Jim was a member of numerous professional societies and organizations, including the
Marine Technology Society,
Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, and the
American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was a consultant in engineering design and analysis, education and yacht design, and authored or co-authored more than 25 publications and 35 technical reports as well as the 1969 book,
Voyage to Atlantis during his WHOI career. After early retirement from the Institution in 1980, he devoted himself to researching and writing about ancient history, anthropology, and archaeoastronomy. He wrote several books and published numerous articles in these fields, and was a member of the
New England Antiquities Research Association. Active in the Woods Hole community, Jim and wife Mary founded the weekly
Woods Hole Folk Dance and the monthly
Woods Hole Contra Dance. He was a founding member of the
Woods Hole Folk Orchestra, playing a variety of instruments including the accordion. He also loved to sail, and was an active member of the
Woods Hole Yacht Club.
Extent
5 boxes (4 lin. ft.)
Overview
The James W. Mavor, Jr. papers consist of Mavor's files relating to technical issues concerning Aluminaut, Alvin, and Lulu.
Custodial History
The custodial history of the records is undocumented.
Acquisitions Information
The papers were received from James Mavor on May 21, 1999 as acc.1999-08. Some of the papers were removed from other material in AC-18.
Processing Information
First-level processing completed by Marisa Hudspeth in December 2003.
- Title
- A Guide to the James W. Mavor, Jr. papers, 1949-1978
- Author
- Marisa Hudspeth
- Date
- December 8, 2003
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written inEnglish
Repository Details
Part of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Data Library and Archives Repository