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''' John Augustus Blume''' was an American [[structural engineer]] born on April 8th, 1909 in [[Gonzales, California]]. He first decided he wanted to study Earthquake Engineering when he witnessed the Santa Barbara earthquake of 1925. In 1929, he went to [[Stanford University]] where he later received his A.B.degree, his graduate Degree of Engineer and his doctorate.

Blume’s career included major contributions to dynamic theory, soil structure interactions, and the inelastic behavior of structures, earning him the title of the “Father of Earthquake Engineering.” <ref>{{cite web | title = Academic Contributions: John A. Blume Earthquake Engineering Center | url = http://quake06.stanford.edu/centennial/tour/stop9.html }}</ref> John Blume died at the age of 92 at his Hillsborough, California home on March 1st, 2002. <ref>{{cite web | title = John Blume, 'father of earthquake engineering,' dies | url = http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2002/march13/blumeobit-313.html }}</ref>

== History ==

'''Earthquakes in his Youth'''

John Augustus Blume was influenced by earthquakes from the very start of his life. He was born on April 8th, 1909 in the town of Gonzales, California. Both sets of his grandparents had survived the Great San Francisco Earthquake and Fire of 1906. He heard many stories in his youth about that earthquake and what it did. Throughout his childhood, while being raised in San Francisco, he felt many minor earthquakes so naturally, he became very interested in the subject.

As a young man, Dr. Blume worked under his father as an apprentice iron worker. While working under his father in Hawaii, he participated in every water and beach sport available. In fact, his original intention was to pursue a career as an athlete; this was not possible, however, as he was diagnosed with a condition known as “athletic heart”. In his time on the islands, John missed out on two years of school, but he was able to skip some years of schooling when he got back by taking an examination. During high school, Dr. Blume was very active in extracurricular activities.

John Blume held many part-time jobs as a young adult; one of the most interesting was working on a long-distance moving van, hauling furniture between the San Francisco Bay area and the Los Angeles and San Diego areas. One night in June 1925, he came into Santa Barbara and bore witness to a magnitude 6.3 earthquake the following morning. John and his companions helped in search and rescue work in the ruins of this earthquake that damaged many buildings and killed 13 people. <ref>{{cite web | title = The 1925 Santa Barbara Earthquake: In Brief | url = http://projects.crustal.ucsb.edu/sb_eqs/1925/1925.html }}</ref> After witnessing this earthquake, “(John) made (himself) a vow, then and there, that someday (he) would do something about it.”


'''A Stanford Education'''

Dr. Blume first entered Stanford University in January 1929 when he created his own study plan which consisted of a mix of chemistry, hard science and math courses. There was no program in earthquake engineering at Stanford or anywhere else, so John had to write his own program. Back then, textbooks referred to buildings as “static”, a notion which Dr. Blume rejected. While at Stanford, John Blume took every class taught by Professor Lydik S. Jacobsen, a mechanical engineer and physicist who designed and built the world’s first multi-story dynamic building model for shaking table experiments. John received his A.B. degree with distinction in 1933 then he went back to Stanford to complete his two-year graduate course toward a Degree of Engineer. While in graduate school, John worked on his thesis with his partner Harry Hesselmeyer and his thesis advisor Professor Lydik Jacobsen. This thesis was called “The Reconciliation of the Computed and Observed Periods of Vibration of a Fifteen-Story Building.” This type of thesis had never been done before, and afterward, John and Harry were asked to present the results of this thesis at the annual meeting of the Seismological Society of America.

As an undergraduate and a graduate, John was very busy all the time. He took a heavy course load and he had to work five or six jobs to pay for everything. Some of these jobs included waiting tables, tutoring and working as an assistant coach in swimming and cross-country running. Even after he received his A.B. degree, John had to work odd jobs because there were no engineering jobs available. He had to rush everywhere he went and somehow still managed to have time for some athletics, while only getting about six hours of sleep every night. John Blume would later return to Stanford to receive his Ph.D. degree in January of 1967.


'''Private Practice'''

Dr. Blume had his first engineering job from 1934-1935 when he worked for the Seismological Division of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. He later worked as a field engineer on the construction of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge from 1935-1936. In 1936, he worked for Standard Oil Company of California as an engineer until 1940. After that, he worked for the Henry Brunnier Firm until 1945.

In 1945, Dr. Blume decided to start his own business which started out as John A. Blume, Structural Engineer. Later, in 1957, his company was known as John A. Blume and Associates and was made into four corporations which were all headed by Dr. Blume. His firm later merged with the URS Corporation, forming URS/John A. Blume and Associates (now known as URS/Greiner). John A. Blume and Associates (JAB) designed or analyzed many special earthquake projects including the Stanford Linear Accelerator, the Embarcadero Center, the restoration of the California State Capitol and the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant. Other projects included offshore oil platforms, wind tunnels, nuclear power plants in seven countries, deep-water harbors and research on earthquakes and seismic effects.


'''Return to Stanford'''

After being a dropout for nearly thirty years, Dr. Blume went back to Stanford University to earn his Ph.D. in 1964. He was 55 years old at the time- not your typical student- however, he wanted to bring his knowledge up to date with modern concepts such as matrix and computer analysis of structures, statistical methods, stochastic processes, and decision-making in civil engineering. Although he was clearly busy heading his own consulting firm, he made time for school work, taking classes for an entire academic year. While under the direction of Professor Donovan H. Young, he began work on his Ph.D. dissertation, “Dynamic Behavior of Multi-Story Buildings with Various Stiffness Characteristics.” During this time, he asked for no special treatment and worked just as hard as any other student. Exactly thirty-four years to the day after receiving his A.B. degree, he was awarded his Ph.D. degree on January 6, 1967.

'''Dedication to His Alma Mater'''

Throughout his life, Dr. Blume showed a dedication to education and research. It is no surprise, therefore, that he left fellowships to support structural engineering graduate students at Stanford. He also encouraged Stanford to develop an “earthquake center” which was dedicated in his name in 1974. <ref>{{cite web | title = The John A. Blume Earthquake Engineering Center | url = http://blume.stanford.edu/pdffiles/Newsletters/Winter2002.pdf }}</ref> Additiononally, Dr. Blume endowed the John A. Blume Professorship chair, which is funded by personal gifts from Stanford which he generously reciprocated. The first recipient was Professor Haresh Shah, one of the co-founders of the Blume Center. The current chair is Professor Helmut Krawinkler, the former co-director of the Blume Center.

== Notes ==

<references />

== References ==

* Blume, John A. Interview with Stanley Scott. Connections: The EERI Oral History Series. 1994.
* {{cite web | title = John Augustus Blume: "The Father of Earthquake Engineering" | url = http://blume.stanford.edu/Blume/John_Blume.htm }}
* {{cite web | title = Engineering: Past, Present & Future 1976 SEAOC Convention Proceedings On Forces That Influence Structural Engineering Practice | url = http://www.seaint.org/seaosc/Newsletter/0017_Scnl%20599.html }}

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[[Category:1909 births]]
[[Category:2002 deaths]]
[[Category:Structural engineers]]
[[Category:Stanford University alumni]]

Revision as of 00:33, 20 October 2008