'Norman Joseph Woodland' (born
September 6,
1921) is best known as one of the inventors of the
barcode, for which he received US Patent 2,612,994 in October of 1952.
[1] He is also known as 'N. Joseph Woodland' or 'NJ Woodland'.
Personal life
Woodland was born in
Atlantic City, New Jersey the eldest of two boys. After graduating from
Atlantic City High School, Woodland went on to earn his
Bachelor of Science in
Mechanical Engineering (BSME) from
Drexel University in
1947.
[2] During his military service in WWII, Woodland worked as a technical assistant with the
Manhattan Project in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee. From 1948-1949, Woodland worked as a lecturer in mechanical engineering at Drexel.
Bar code
Sometime in 1948 his colleague Bernard Silver overheard a supermarket executive asking the dean of students to figure out how to capture product information automatically at checkout. The dean turned down the request, but Silver mentioned the problem to his friend Woodland. The two worked on some preliminary ideas, which convinced Woodland that they could create a viable product. Woodland took some stock market earnings, quit his teaching job and moved to his grandfather's Florida apartment. While at the beach one day, Woodland again thought about the problem; what came to his mind was
Morse code. If dots and dashes could be used to send information electronically, there certainly should be a way to capture data about grocery products that could be communicated electronically. Another source of inspiration was the technology used for converting wave forms to sound in the movie industry. Woodland started to draw dots and dashes in the sand similar to the shapes used in Morse code, and then pulled them downward with his fingers. What appeared were thin lines resulting from the dots and thick lines from the dashes: a two-dimensional Morse code. Silver and Woodland applied for a patent in October 1949. Woodland got a job at IBM in 1951, and although he wanted IBM to develop the technology, it wasn't feasible until the 1970s. Variations on the bar code technology were developed commercially though the 1960s. IBM became involved in 1971 when they transferred Woodland to their North Carolina facilities, where he played a key role in developing the most important version of the technology, the
Universal Product Code (UPC).
Awards
★ In 1973
IBM presented Woodland with their Outstanding Contribution Award.
2
★ In 1992 he was awarded the
National Medal of Technology from President
George H. W. Bush for his contribution to bar code technology.
[3]
★ In 1998 Woodland received an honorary degree from his alma mater, Drexel University.
2
References
1.
2. Dr. Joseph Woodland '47 (MEM), Hon. '98 Alumni
3. "The National Medal of Technology Recipients"