Heck, Charles McGee, 1881-1952.

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Heck, Charles McGee, 1881-1952.

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Heck, Charles McGee, 1881-1952.

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Physicist (radiation interchanges between earth and sky, multiple radiator for meteorological research). A. B., Wake Forest College, 1900; A. M, Columbia, 1901; Professor and Head, North Carolina State University, Dept. of Physics, 1913-1946. In retirement he devoted himself to writing a history of Raleigh, N. C.

From the description of Papers, 1938-1943. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 154302706 From the description of Charles McGee Heck papers, 1922-1943 [manuscript]. (North Carolina State University). WorldCat record id: 466904348

Professor Charles McGee Heck was born on May 28, 1881, in the family residence on Blount Street, between Lane and North, in Raleigh, North Carolina. At the age of fifteen he began his freshman year at Wake Forest College and received an A.B. in the year 1900. He continued as a graduate student at Columbia University where he parlayed previous research on the chemistry of alternating current, performed in his attic during preceeding summers, and received an M.A. in 1901.

After spending time in Berlin and China, Heck returned to the United States and took a position at the University of Nebraska as an Assistant Professor of Physics, 1905-1912. After a short period at Colorado College, Heck took a position under William Hand Browne in the fall of 1913 as Associate Professor of Physics in the Electrical Engineering Department at North Carolina State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (later North Carolina State University). He achieved the title of Professor and Head of the Physics Department in 1917. During his tenure, Professor Heck designed the Physics half of the building that would later be named in honor of Josephus Daniels. He discovered the first known spiral crystal and devised the multiple radiator for meteorological reseach and weather forecasting. Upon his retirement in 1946, he was named Dean Emeritus.

In addition to his academic career, Heck spearheaded a relief effort to save millions of Chinese from starvation shortly after World War I. He also, as a result of his interest in the history and future of North Carolina, compiled materials for young students, to inspire "them to love Raleigh and their state and implant in their young minds a determination to be loyal to and serve this community..."

Heck was married to Maude Williams Heck. They had one son, Charles W. Heck. Charles McGee Heck died on November 23, 1952.

From the guide to the Charles McGee Heck Papers, 1922 - 1943, (Special Collections Research Center)

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China

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North Carolina

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Raleigh (N. C.)

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Germany

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China

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Raleigh (N.C.)

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Raleigh (N.C.)

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