Bernard Benson
Bernard S. Benson (28 January 1922 – 15 May 1996) was a British inventor and author.[1]
Bernard Benson | |
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Bernard Benson in France in the 1960s | |
Born | Bernard S. Benson 28 January 1922 |
Died | 15 May 1996 74) | (aged
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Inventor, author |
Employer | Douglas Aircraft Company Benson-Lehner Corporation |
Spouse(s) | Jane Lysbeth Saville Sneath Maryse Lheureux |
Children | 10 |
Military career | |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
War | World War II |
Biography
Benson was a fighter pilot during World War II, and later worked on the design of early British missiles. He emigrated to the United States where at Douglas Aircraft Company., in Santa Monica, California, he worked on the Douglas F4D Skyray fighter and various Douglas missiles.[2]
Early in the 1950s, he founded Benson-Lehner Corporation with George F. G. Lehner, a psychology professor at UCLA. Soon after its founding, futurist Donald Prell joined the company as Vice President, Application Engineering. The new company was successful, as it filled a niche designing systems that were used to provide data input and output to and from the early computers. The B/L machines semi-automatically read oscillograph and photographic flight test data producing punched tape and IBM punch cards which were then entered into computers. After being processed, the data was then automatically printed on large flatbed graph-plotters. This process automated the formerly manual reading and subsequent hand-plotting of data. B/L plotters soon became the industry standard, and were sold worldwide. After an IPO, the company expanded into the field of high speed photography. Two photo-mechanical engineers, Guy Hearon and Harry Katt, were hired, who designed a series of 16mm, 35mm, and 70mm high speed cameras and accessories. Trade catalogs from the Benson-Lehner Corporation are held by the National Museum of American History Library.[3]
In 1961, Benson was one of the first people to warn against the privacy risks raised by computers, claiming that digital data could one day be fed into a single system, leaving individuals at the mercy "of who or what controls the machine".[4]
Writing
Books that Benson wrote included: The Minstrel, an allegorical story about Elvis Presley, Alice in Plunderland, Strictly Birdsmanship (or how to lay the egg that kills the golden goose), and On Being an Egghead; or Engineersmanship for the Shell of it.
Retirement
Early in the 1960s, Benson retired and moved to France, where he purchased the Chateau de Chaban located in the Dordogne. While living there with his first wife Jane Lysbeth Saville Sneath and their seven children, he began writing children's books based on the philosophy of a group of Tibetan monks, who shared his estate. Benson tried to make their philosophy readily understandable to both young and old. He then married Maryse Lheureux and had three daughters.
References
- "Greene acquires a Canadian publisher". Montreal Gazette. 30 January 1982. Retrieved 13 January 2010.
- "United States Social Security Death Index". familysearch. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
- "Trade catalogs from Benson-Lehner Corp". National Museum of American History. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- Quoted in: Fuster, Gloria González. 2014. The Emergence of Personal Data Protection as a Fundamental Right of the EU. Springer Science & Business. p. 29.