Sanford E. Thompson

Sanford Eleazer Thompson (1867-1949) was an American engineer and consultant to the U.S. government and private sector. He is considered one of the key figures of the American scientific management movement, which emerged in the progressive era.

Education and early career

Thompson was trained as a civil engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating in 1889. He was initially employed in construction and hydraulic engineering before becoming an independent consultant from 1896-1917.[1]

He entered the U.S. Army Ordnance Department as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1917.[1]

Work with F.W. Taylor and the time study

Thompson was a key ally of Frederick Winslow Taylor and was important in the development of Taylor's time studies, particularly in the building industry.[2]

To accompany Taylor's Harvard College lectures, Thompson delivered an advanced course on time studies.[3]

With Taylor, he co-wrote Concrete Costs (1912),[4] a goal of which was to distil different kinds of manual labor into comparable Unit Times data.[5]

Years later, Lyndall Urwick wrote of Thompson that 'To him belongs the credit for perfecting the "tool" of management, and to him is attributed the invention of the decimal-dial stop-watch.'[1]

Consultancy career

When peace returned, Thompson established another consultancy, Thompson and Lichtner, of which he was President from 1925 through 1949.[1]

He was President of the Taylor Society in 1932.[1]

During World War Two, Thompson acted as a consultant to the U.S. Secretary of War, Henry Lewis Stimson.[1]

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Lyndall Urwick, The Golden Book of Management: A Historical Record of the Life and Work of Seventy Pioneers (1956)
  2. Charles D. Wrege and Ronald G. Greenwood, 'Discovering Some of the Roots of Taylor's Shop Management: Taylor's Secret Six-Year Study of the Building Trades' Proceedings of the Midwest Academy of Management (1981)
  3. F.W. Taylor and Sanford E. Thompson, Concrete Costs (John Wiley & Sons, 1912). Online at Archive.org
  4. Michael R. Weatherburn, 'Scientific Management at Work: the Bedaux System, Management Consulting, and Worker Efficiency in British Industry, 1914-48' (Imperial College PhD thesis, 2014). "Download PDF from Imperial College, London".

Further reading

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