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Thomas
Augustus Watson Born
in Salem, Mass., on January 18, 1854, the son of Thomas R. and
Mary (Phipps) Watson. After completing his early education in
the public schools of Salem, he went to work, in 1872, in the
electrical shop of Charles Williams, Jr., at 109 Court Street,
Boston. A number of inventors had their models made at
William's shop, and in 1874 Watson became acquainted with
Alexander Graham Bell, with whom he worked closely thereafter
during the period of the invention and early commercial
establishment of the telephone. When Bell went to Europe in
1877, Watson became the research and technical head of the Bell
Telephone Co.
In the spring of 1881, enriched by the
rise in bell stock, he resigned his position, and after a year
of travel in Europe, married, on September 5, 1882, Elizabeth
Seaver Kimball of Cohasset, Mass. Shortly afterwards he
settled in East Braintree, Mass., and in partnership with Frank
O. Wellington entered the shipbuilding business from which he
retired in 1904 with a large fortune.
His
intellectual accomplishments were many. At the age of 40 he and
his wife, although then the parents of four children, entered
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In geology he
awakened the respect of professional scientists, and in
literature he was widely known as an interpreter of poetry and
drama. He was president of the Boston browning Society and
became ultimately a proficient student of music and painting.
In 1926 he published his autobiography. He was a fellow of the
American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the recipient of
three honorary degrees.
He died at his winter home in
Passagrille Key, Fla., near St. Petersburg on December 13,
1934. Mrs. Watson survived her husband by more than 13 years
and died at the age of 90 years in a hospital at St. Petersburg,
Florida, on April 23, 1948.
Reprinted from
Connecticut Pioneers in Telephony 1950 |