IBM Watson Lab #1: 612 West 116th Street 1945-1970. | IBM Watson Lab #2: 612 West 115th Street 1953-1970. |
The founder and director of Watson Lab was Columbia Astronomy professor Wallace Eckert, who had previously founded and operated the world's first scientific computing laboratory in Pupin Hall in the 1930s, and served as director of the US Naval Observatory's Nautical Almanac Office during the War. Watson Lab was a department of Columbia University, giving academic courses and sponsoring PhD theses. Watson Lab staff held Columbia faculty appointments, and Watson Lab provided access to and training on computing machines for Columbia researchers before Columbia had its own computers. The first computer courses were taught here and on campus by Watson Lab scientists.
Several historic computers were designed and/or built at Watson Lab, including SSEC (1948, arguably the world's first true computer); NORC (1954, the first supercomputer); and the IBM 610 (1956, the first personal computer). Eckert used the SSEC to perform the lunar-orbit calculations that would guide the Apollo moon missions. A great deal of other scientific work, notably in physics, molecular chemistry, and thermodynamics also took place at Watson Lab.
In 1970, IBM moved its Watson Laboratory to Yorktown Heights, New York, and left the two "612" buildings to Columbia; the 116th Street building is now Casa Hispanica, and the 115th Street building has been occupied in whole or in part by the Columbia Computer Center in its many incarnations, name changes, and reorganizations, since 1970.
Columbia Spectator articles about Watson Lab from the 1940s and 50s (found by Allan Olley 22 Sep 2023); click each image to read:
Also see: Watson Lab Gallery (1945-59)
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Columbia University Computing History | Frank da Cruz / fdc@columbia.edu | This page created: January 2001 | Last update: 5 September 2023 |