our 2010 man of the year

1
THE SKINNY ON THE CARRIER FAMILY IN THE NEW WORLD The Carriers made their start in the New World, according to one biography, when Thomas Carrier, age 41, emigrated from Wales in 1663, settling in what would become Andover, Mass. He there met Martha Allen and they soon became man and wife, but the story didn’t end well at all. Margaret Ingels’ 1952 biography of Willis Carrier relates this: “After standing up against the Andover town fathers in a boundary dispute, [Martha] was accused of being a witch. Two of her sons, aged 13 and 10, were hung by their heels until they, too, testified against her. Cotton Mather denounced her as a ‘rampant hag’ whom the Devil had promised ‘should be the queen of Hell.’ She was arrested, convicted and, on August 19, 1692, hanged on Salem’s Gallows Hill. [Editor’s note: if you’re reading this on Thursday, that was exactly 318 years ago today.] Later it was recorded that of all the New Englanders charged with witchcraft, ‘Martha Carrier was the only one, male or female, who did not at some time or other make an admission or confession.’” About a hundred years later — in 1799 — the Carriers migrated to Western New York. Willis was born in 1876, and married three times and was widowed twice. All four are buried in the Forest Lawn Cemetery in Buffalo, NY. For his contributions to science and industry, says Wikipedia, “Willis Carrier was awarded an honorary doctor of letters from Alfred (N.Y.) University in 1942, was awarded the Frank P. Brown Medal in 1942, was inducted posthumously in the National Inventors Hall of Fame (1985) and the Buffalo Science Museum Hall of Fame (2008)” and was named the Augusta Medical Examiner’s Man of the Year (2010). $5.00 OFF any purchase of $25 or more NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR $19.95 SET $15.00 OFF any purchase of $75 or more NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR $19.95 SET HOME OF THE WORLD FAMOUS $ 19.95 SCRUB SET MEDICAL Scrubs, stethoscopes, lab coats, blood pressure kits, accessories RESTAURANT Chef coats & hats, aprons linens, bar mops INDUSTRIAL Work shirts, pants, hats, gloves, jackets CHURCH Usher dresses, shoes, hats SCREENPRINTING & EMBROIDERY OUTLET STORE 1216 Broad Street • Downtown Augusta Since 1930 - 706-722-4653 - 80 Years HOURS: Mon - Fri 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. DOCTORS HOSPITAL • EISENHOWER ARMY MEDICAL CENTER • EAST CENTRAL REGIONAL • GRACEWOOD • MCGHEALTH • MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA • PRIVATE PRACTICE • SELECT SPECIALTY HOSPITAL • TRINITY HOSPITAL • UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL • VA HOSPITALS • WALTON REHABILITATION HOSPITAL TM AUGUSTA + FREE TAKE-HOME COPY! AUGUST 20, 2010 AUGUSTA’S MOST SALUBRIOUS NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED IN 2006 M A N O F T H E Y E A R Two Thousand Ten The King of Cool o you know who this man is? If you live anywhere within several hundred miles of Augusta and you have no idea, well, that’s just a truly sad and pitiful state of affairs. Why? Not because this man ever lived here or to our knowledge even visited Augusta. But we can safely say that, without this man, chances are you and I wouldn’t be living in Augusta either. Who was he? Here’s a clue or two. He was born and died in Angola, New York (1876 - 1950). At age 19 he was awarded a scholarship to Cornell University and graduated in 1901 with a degree in mechanical engineering. Before the end of 1902, he had already invented — and installed within the premises of a customer — the invention that changed the world. Not to mention your life and mine. Today. Yesterday. Last week and last month, too. This very second, in fact. It’s not the heat It really isn’t. It’s the humidity. And that was one of the rst strokes of genius for which our hero was responsible. And by the way, our hero is one Willis Haviland Carrier. If by chance his name doesn’t sound familiar, it might if you remember that his rst and middle names are silent. Yes, Mr. Carrier is the man who invented air conditioning! His brand name continues to appear on air conditioners to this day. Why there isn’t a national holiday in his honor — or at least across the Southern states as a bare minimum — is completely beyond us. It’s a national outrage and a complete travesty that should be rectied immediately. But back to the subheading. The ground oor of Carrier’s world-changing invention, air conditioning, was the realization that controlling humidity was the rst principle of what we’ll call indoor comfort — although his rst customers were all in industrial settings. He was hired to attack humid air in printeries and pasta factories, but along the way new applications evolved. A bank had a patented “Carrier Apparatus” installed in 1906. Later that year, he came to the Palmetto State to help control heat generated by 5,000 whirling spindles in a cotton mill. But it was in 1911 that Willis Carrier presented a paper at the annual meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Entitled “Rational Psychometric Formulae,” the paper became known as the Magna Carta of Psychometrics. The Magna Carta, let us remember, is widely considered to be one of the most important legal documents in the history of democracy. Carrier’s Magna Carta likewise is perhaps the most important document in the history of conditioned air. — Strike that. It’s one of the most important documents in terms of the physical health of billions of people. Why it matters Among the ills prevented by Carrier’s epic invention are various afictions with life- threatening implications: • heatstroke, in which the body temperature rises rapidly to 106° or higher, resulting in dizziness, strong rapid pulse, dry skin and even death. • heat exhaustion, a condition marked by profuse sweating, rapid respirations and a rapid, weak pulse, which often leads immediately to heatstroke. • heat cramps are painful muscle spasms that occur from chemical changes and early- stage dehydration during heavy exercise and perspiration. • heat rash: who even remembers heat rash, thanks to Willis Carrier? It is (or was) skin irritation as the result of excessive sweating and often aficted babies, making their lives — and everyone within earshot — miserable. Aside from babies, all of these miserable conditions particularly victimize the elderly and people who are sick or overweight. According to the CDC, in temperatures in the high 90s — exactly what we’ve been having for weeks — even sitting in front of a fan will not prevent heat-related illness. Yes, each and every one of us owes a tremendous debt of gratitude to Willis Haviland Carrier, our rst Medical Examiner Man of the Year. Editor’s note: the other Man of the Year candidates competing against Willis Carrier each earns an Honorable Mention: Jonas Salk, Albert Einstein, Mother Teresa and Linus Pauling. D + +

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Willis Carrier, the man who should be every year's Man of the Year, especially in the South.

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Page 1: Our 2010 Man of the Year

THE SKINNYON THE CARRIER FAMILY

IN THE NEW WORLD The Carriers made their start in the New World, according to one biography, when Thomas Carrier, age 41, emigrated from Wales in 1663, settling in what would become Andover, Mass. He there met Martha Allen and they soon became man and wife, but the story didn’t end well at all. Margaret Ingels’ 1952 biography of Willis Carrier relates this: “After standing up against the Andover town fathers in a boundary dispute, [Martha] was accused of being a witch. Two of her sons, aged 13 and 10, were hung by their heels until they, too, testifi ed against her. Cotton Mather denounced her as a ‘rampant hag’ whom the Devil had promised ‘should be the queen of Hell.’ She was arrested, convicted and, on August 19, 1692, hanged on Salem’s Gallows Hill. [Editor’s note: if you’re reading this on Thursday, that was exactly 318 years ago today.] Later it was recorded that of all the New Englanders charged with witchcraft, ‘Martha Carrier was the only one, male or female, who did not at some time or other make an admission or confession.’” About a hundred years later — in 1799 — the Carriers migrated to Western New York. Willis was born in 1876, and married three times and was widowed twice. All four are buried in the Forest Lawn Cemetery in Buffalo, NY. For his contributions to science and industry, says Wikipedia, “Willis Carrier was awarded an honorary doctor of letters from Alfred (N.Y.) University in 1942, was awarded the Frank P. Brown Medal in 1942, was inducted posthumously in the National Inventors Hall of Fame (1985) and the Buffalo Science Museum Hall of Fame (2008)” and was named the Augusta Medical Examiner’s Man of the Year (2010).

$5.00 OFFany purchase of

$25 or moreNOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR $19.95 SET

$15.00 OFFany purchase of

$75 or moreNOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR $19.95 SET

HOME OF THEWORLD FAMOUS

$19.95 SCRUB SET

•MEDICAL Scrubs, stethoscopes, lab coats,

blood pressure kits, accessories

•RESTAURANT Chef coats & hats, aprons

linens, bar mops

•INDUSTRIAL Work shirts, pants, hats,

gloves, jackets

•CHURCH Usher dresses, shoes, hats

•SCREENPRINTING & EMBROIDERY

OUTLET STORE1216 Broad Street • Downtown Augusta

Since 1930 - 706-722-4653 - 80 YearsHOURS: Mon - Fri 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

DOCTORS HOSPITAL • EISENHOWER ARMY MEDICAL CENTER • EAST CENTRAL REGIONAL • GRACEWOOD • MCGHEALTH • MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA • PRIVATE PRACTICE • SELECT SPECIALTY HOSPITAL • TRINITY HOSPITAL • UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL • VA HOSPITALS • WALTON REHABILITATION HOSPITAL

TM

AUGU

STA + FREE TAKE-HOME COPY!

AUGUST 20, 2010AUGUSTA’S MOST SALUBRIOUS NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED IN 2006

MAN OF THE YEARTwo Thousand Ten

The King of Cool

o you know who this man is? If you live

anywhere within several hundred miles of Augusta and you have no idea, well, that’s just a truly sad and pitiful state of affairs. Why? Not because this man ever lived here or to our knowledge even visited Augusta. But we can safely say that, without this man, chances are you and I wouldn’t be living in Augusta either. Who was he? Here’s a clue or two. He was born and died in Angola, New York (1876 - 1950). At age 19 he was awarded a scholarship to Cornell University and graduated in 1901 with a degree in mechanical engineering. Before the end of 1902, he had already invented — and installed within the premises of a customer — the invention that changed the world. Not to mention your life and mine. Today. Yesterday. Last week and last month, too. This very second, in fact.

It’s not the heat It really isn’t. It’s the humidity. And that was one of the fi rst strokes of genius for which our hero was responsible. And by the way, our hero is one Willis Haviland Carrier. If by chance his name doesn’t sound familiar, it might if you remember that his fi rst and middle names are silent. Yes, Mr. Carrier is the man who invented air conditioning! His brand name continues to appear on air conditioners to this day. Why there isn’t a national holiday in his honor — or at least across the Southern states as a bare minimum — is completely beyond us. It’s a national outrage and a complete travesty that should be rectifi ed immediately. But back to the subheading.

The ground fl oor of Carrier’s world-changing invention, air conditioning, was the realization that controlling humidity was the fi rst principle of what we’ll call indoor comfort — although his fi rst customers were all in industrial settings. He was hired to attack humid air in printeries and pasta factories, but along the way new applications evolved. A bank had a patented “Carrier Apparatus” installed in 1906. Later that year, he came to the Palmetto State to help control heat generated by 5,000 whirling spindles in a cotton mill.

But it was in 1911 that Willis Carrier presented a paper at the annual meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Entitled “Rational Psychometric Formulae,” the paper became known as the Magna Carta of Psychometrics. The Magna Carta, let us remember, is widely considered to be one of the most important legal documents in the history of democracy. Carrier’s Magna Carta likewise is perhaps the most important document in the history of conditioned air. — Strike that.

It’s one of the most important documents in terms of the physical health of billions of people.

Why it matters Among the ills prevented by Carrier’s epic invention are various affl ictions with life-threatening implications:• heatstroke, in which the body temperature rises rapidly to 106° or higher, resulting in dizziness, strong rapid pulse, dry skin and even death.• heat exhaustion, a condition marked by profuse sweating, rapid respirations and a rapid, weak pulse, which often leads immediately to heatstroke.• heat cramps are painful muscle spasms that occur from chemical changes and early-stage dehydration during heavy exercise and perspiration.• heat rash: who even remembers heat rash, thanks to Willis Carrier? It is (or was) skin irritation as the result of excessive sweating and often affl icted babies, making their lives — and everyone within earshot — miserable. Aside from babies, all of these miserable conditions particularly victimize the elderly and people who are sick or overweight. According to the CDC, in temperatures in the high 90s — exactly what we’ve been having for weeks — even sitting in front of a fan will not prevent heat-related illness. Yes, each and every one of us owes a tremendous debt of gratitude to Willis Haviland Carrier, our fi rst Medical Examiner Man of the Year.

Editor’s note: the other Man of the Year candidates competing against Willis Carrier each earns an Honorable Mention: Jonas Salk, Albert Einstein, Mother Teresa and Linus Pauling.

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