b. 1924 - 2022, SB 1948 (electrical engineering) MIT, MS 1952 (electrical engineering) Case Institute of Technology; graduate study in mathematics and statistics, New York University, 1956-1959; joined Bell Laboratories in 1953 as member of technical staff (MTS); supervisor, 1965-1975; department head, Operator Services Department, 1975- 1982, and Switching Systems Studies, 1983-1984; division manager, Network Switching Technology, Bellcore, 1984- 1988; owner, Systems for Special Needs, 1988- ; adjunct faculty, Newark College of Engineering and New Jersey Institute of Technology; president, Telephone Pioneers of America Council, Bellcore and Bell Laboratories; holder of two US patents.
https://direct.mit.edu/books/book/5038/chapter/2977064/VICTOR-L-RANSOM
Based on
your letter asking about things that might be of interest to the archives that
you’re generating, I gathered up for you several articles that I had written
for Bell Laboratories publications. Bell produced two periodicals, one was the
BSTJ, a technical journal, and the other was the Record, which was directed
more to a popular technical audience. Among the material that I have brought is
a copy of the Record in which my picture was used on the cover. In the issue, I
was writing about the system I had worked on. It was a system that at the time
was considered to be “new art” and so was of considerable general interest to
people in the company. The transistor had recently been invented at the Lab and
the management was making a big effort to use transistors in all their systems.
Ours was a system built around transistors and digital products.
In the late
’60s, an effort was made by the company to show blacks in their various roles
in the laboratory. One of the pictures which I have given you was used
repeatedly. In fact, it was used in the annual report for AT&T and was also
placed on the wall at 195 Broadway, AT&T headquarters. I used to amuse
myself, since I went there often for meetings, by checking to see if the
picture was still on the wall. I said, “Well, if it’s still there, I must still
have a job. As soon as they take it down, I know they’re going to get rid of
me.” As I said, the picture appeared in a number of places. The copy that came
up when I reached for materials was a booklet that talked about educational
opportunities at Bell Laboratories. In it, there is a full-page picture of me.
I’m explaining how a piece of measuring equipment that we use would function.
Among the
articles I have given you also is the most recent that I’ve written, which was
published in an encyclopedia. About the time I retired, I became interested, as
a result of volunteer work with the Telephone Pioneers, in technology for
people who have various types of disabilities. In fact, in the last year, when
I knew I would be retiring, I gave up my management job and began working on
applications that might be of interest to the operating companies on the use of
technology for people who are disabled. I used that as an opportunity to teach
myself a lot about what was happening in that field. A friend of mine who was
writing this encyclopedia on telecommunications asked if I could produce an
article that he might use in this general area. I wrote this article entitled
“Communication Aids for People with Special Needs,”for the encyclopedia. The
piece with written with an associate of mine who had been working with me in
this area, Laura Redmann. The paper surveys applications of computers to
communication for people who are disabled in one way or another. I’ve been
involved in that field since I’ve been retired. I also teach a course at New
Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) on the application of computers to people
who are disabled.
There’s a
story that goes along with that. The shorter version of it is that the program
was started more or less as a pilot program at NJIT to teach students in the
technician area about “rehabilitation engineering.” The government funded it in
such a way that it was popular. I believe it paid tuition and bought books for
students in the program. I was brought into the program to develop and teach
this course on computer applications. I taught once under the program. Sadly, there
was an implosion in the number of students who entered the program and funding
for the program ended. I went on to teach other courses and we are now offering
the course again this fall to see if there’s enough remaining interest.
The field of
rehabilitation technology has been a source of continuing interest for me.
Besides the training program I just mentioned, the federal government also
developed a program to make people more aware of assistive technology. The term
“assistive” is generally used instead of “rehabilitation.” The name applies to
a whole range of technology, from wheelchairs to aids for persons who are
visually impaired to types of specially adapted environmental controls. Under
the federal government program, on the order of five hundred million dollars
over five years was allocated to the states to come up with programs to
increase public awareness of assistive technology and to help people obtain the
technology.
I was active
with a group to try to bring the program to New Jersey. We have had the program
now for a number of years. It’s called TARP (Technology Assisted Resource
Program). I am on the State Council for the program. What they try to do is to
provide resource centers where people who have the need for equipment can come
see it and try it out, and also to work across a broad range of problems that
people have with getting and using equipment. Usually, the major problem is
that people who need the technology can’t get funded. Medicaid has never heard
of the equipment or doesn’t think they can fund it. So TARP works with a group
of legal people to help to resolve these kinds of problems, and I’m still
active in that effort.
I think I
explained how I got involved in this work. It was when I was with Bell
Laboratories, toward the end of that career—or was it the middle somewhere? I
know at the time I was a department head. The management at that time very
actively supported a community service group called the Telephone Pioneers, a
volunteer group that existed throughout the Bell system. We were encouraged in
the management to play a leadership role. Your boss might say, “It would be
nice if you would run for vice president or president in our location’s
Pioneers Council.”
I came into the Pioneers in that way. I was
intrigued by the fact that one of the more interesting things that Pioneers at
Bell Labs did was to develop communication aids. I was always surprised,
though, that there wasn’t a greater involvement within the Lab in that aspect
of the Pioneers’ work. I particularly wanted to become involved in that aspect
of their work because it tied into my engineering, and I was anxious to do
something that would help people who are disabled. This interest came about in
large part because my son has schizophrenia. That’s a mental illness that’s not
well understood. The people who work in that area are largely psychiatrists and
psychologists, and I’m not that. But the encounter with a disability increases
your sensitivity to the special needs of people with disabilities, and I
thought this was an area in which I could be relevant.
So I began
working in this area with other volunteers at Bell Laboratories, and later at
Bellcore, when I was transferred there. One thing I noticed as I worked with
this group was that we had a “not-invented-here” approach. That was
characteristic of the Laboratories people at that time. If it wasn’t in the
Bell Systems, then it didn’t exist. So when we were told about someone who had
a particular need, we went out and designed and built our own equipment. But
over time I became aware of the fact there was a very substantial field already
existing of people building equipment. A lot of them would be businesses that
would start and then fail because there wasn’t a general awareness of the
availability of this technology. So when I knew I would be retiring, I thought,
“That’s a fun area to work in and I ought to learn more about the field.”
That’s when
I took off the year and, among other things, I joined the RESNA—which used to
stand for the Rehabilitation Engineering Society of North America, but the
group no longer appeals only to engineers but to a broad range of persons
working in the field. In addition to joining this group and attending their
conferences and workshops, I took a course—at the TRACE Center at the
University of Wisconsin—concerned with the application of computers and controls
for disabled persons. I then changed my job at Bellcore to work on identifying
an area that Bell operating companies could change to offer better service to
disabled persons.
After I
retired, I formed a small company called Systems for Special Needs. Under the
company name, I have designed environmental control equipment which is used to
a limited degree at one of the hospitals in New York. I still remain in touch
with the hospital’s staff and continue to do some occasional design work for
them. The company has provided me, along with my teaching, with a considerable
source of satisfaction and entertainment. I have found that it is more useful
to deal as a company rather than an individual, so the company still exists
even though my profits are small. I pay my occasional taxes and make occasional
earnings.
In the
company and teaching, my other effort in the assistive technology field is a
bit of voluntary work with a resource center in my community, the Tech
Connection, whose principal focus is providing opportunities for disabled
persons and their families to learn and use various types of assistive
technology. So that’s largely where I have been since I retired.
One of the things that I think would be very helpful is to talk
a little bit about your family and your early precollege experience. Some of
the highlights of that period I think would be good.
I was born
in New York City. My mother was a teacher in the New York City school system.
She was an intellectual and aware of what was going on in the world. My father
was primarily a writer. He wrote in newspapers and at one time became a
photographer. He went to Fordham College and Fordham Law School and completed
both programs, earning an LL.B. degree, but he never practiced law. It was a
very difficult time in the early years of the Depression, but because my mother
was a teacher we were moderately comfortable. She went to Howard University and
knew all the people down there. Her family, the Flagg family, came from
Washington, DC. Her sister was one of the founders of AKA, the Alpha Kappa
Alpha sorority at Howard. My parents were part of an interesting and wide-awake
group called the Harlem Renaissance.
I don’t
think that I did terribly well in elementary school. I just remember it as a
grim, uninteresting experience, with my mother desperately trying to teach me
to spell. But toward the end of junior high school, I began to be a little more
scholarly and became interested in school. As a result of my mother’s drawing
it to my attention, I took the examination to go to Stuyvesant High School, a
special school in New York City emphasizing science. I passed the examination.
Attending
Stuyvesant was an exciting and interesting experience. I lived at home and
commuted. At the time I applied, I was living in New York City. We had the
unusual experience of moving from Brooklyn to New York repeatedly during that
period. I like to kid about the fact that my mother moved sixteen times before
I was sixteen years old. If she thought the schools were better in another
community that was “opening up” to blacks, or if the landlord complained about
anything we kids did, we would move! I don’t remember it as being a
particularly unpleasant experience. We often moved back and forth between
communities that we knew.
We lived in
Washington Heights. Last night, my wife said, “Why don’t you say Harlem?” We
were very much aware of the fact that Washington Heights was not part of
Harlem, but I guess today it’s considered Harlem. At any rate, we lived in the
same house several times and even in the same apartment. I moved so much that
going to a high school outside our neighborhood didn’t seem to be unreasonable.
I had to commute to Stuyvesant, on the subway from Manhattan or Brooklyn. All
the moving meant that I wasn’t really as involved in the social life of the
community.
During the
Depression years, one of the significant factors that influenced me greatly was
my summers at Camp Atwater, a black camp in East Brookfield, Massachusetts. I
attended for about ten years. I recall with considerable affection a nature
study program conducted by Frank Johnson, who later became a pathologist. I
never saw him after the camp experience, but he greatly influenced me toward a
career in science. He was very much the “SCIENTIST” for me. I was uncertain as
to what area of science I was interested in. In fact, when I had to choose a
high school, my uncertainty was a factor in selecting Stuyvesant over Brooklyn
Tech. I wasn’t sure what I wanted, science or engineering. Brooklyn Technical High
School sounded too much like engineering, and since I had never met an engineer
nor read what they did exactly, I had no role model.
I think my
decision to apply to MIT was as a result of my mother’s awareness. She was an
active member of the Teacher’s Union in New York City. By the end of high
school, I was fairly sure I wanted engineering, and MIT offered science and
engineering. I wasn’t particularly conscious of the very high tuition. My
parents always acted as though college was just something you did! I remember
having an interview with someone who was part of the Educational Council
Program, at one of the offices downtown. The interviewer asked me, “How will
you handle tuition? ”I had no idea. I just assumed my mother would pay. He
later asked my mother and she simply said, “We will pay.” I didn’t get
scholarship aid at that time. In fact, I was not initially admitted, but was
placed on the waiting list and then subsequently admitted. I had done quite
well in high school, but Stuyvesant had some brilliant students and several had
applied to MIT.
At any rate,
I got in. I don’t recall a great deal about it, but there are a few things I do
remember. One of them was that, as I had never seen the school before I
arrived, I thought it looked like my idea of the War Department. It was my idea
of just the massive, very unsympathetic buildings. But what MIT did at the time
that I thought was marvelous was to have a freshman camp. Freshmen were invited
to come to a camp experience. It was held outside in Massachusetts somewhere
and it ran for several days. We sat around the fire and people talked. I recall
swimming in a lake at the camp, which had water as cold as I can ever remember
in my life. I still can remember the ringing in my body, the sitting around the
camp fire in the evening, and a group leader saying, “Look at the fellow to the
left and the one to the right—only one of you is going to be there at the end.”
There was
much more emphasis on the severity of the MIT experience at that time. There was
school on Saturday, which was a new experience for me. I don’t think they kept
that up too long. I lived off-campus, and I suspect it was related to a cost
issue,I don’t know. I very much remember living with a black family on Dana
Street, 55 Dana. I still occasionally go by to see if the house is still there.
I only lived off-campus for about the first six months or so. I knew more
people at Harvard than I did at MIT. I had a friend—a close friend—who was
entering Harvard at the same time, so whatever social life I had, which was
minimal, was with black students in that program at Harvard. I remember going
into Walker Memorial at MIT, where they served dinner, and thinking that it was
so fancy. I remember saying to myself, “My goodness, I’m not sure I can handle
all this.” But eating in Central Square was so depressing to me that I finally
decided to move on-campus.
I had
entered in 1941, and on December 7 Japan dropped the bombs on Pearl Harbor.
This event led to stark change at MIT. There was an immediate appearance of
military people and guards and a shuffling of the living arrangements. I can’t
recall the circumstances that led to my decision to move, but I moved initially
into that complex of dormitories called Westgate, I believe.
On the west
side of campus? Yes, right. I was in there for a little bit of time. I lived
with a student who was black. He invited me to move in with him, but we had
very little in common. He was extremely religious, which was not my background.
My mother was very interested in all kinds of new-age religions and Christian
Science and all that sort of thing, so he would be praying on his knees in the
room in the evening and I would be wondering what he was doing and what I was
supposed to do. It really troubled me. We got along so poorly that neither of
us would ever let anything be out of place. The room was immaculate. We didn’t
live together long because the Navy, or some part of the military group, took
over that complex I then moved into the Senior House. It may be that in the
Senior House we lived together as well, I can’t recall. But at any rate, that
also was short-lived because subsequent to that I moved, in the second year,
into the graduate house. There were four of us living together.
They were
white and from various parts of New York, I recall. I don’t actually remember
any of their names, except that it was very pleasant. I enjoyed that
experience.
Just after
we entered the war, everyone was acutely aware that they might have to go into
the armed forces. I made, under the influence of the school, a decision to
apply to the ASTP, an Army program which assured us that we would be brought
into the Army for basic training and we would be sent back to school. At some
time at the end of the second year, when I finished the term, I was told that I
would have to take basic training. I received a letter from the ROTC program,
which I was involved in, that said something like, “This man has had training
in engineering and ought to be considered for the Signal Corps.” Well, the Army
had no idea what to do with that note like this about a black soldier, so I
stayed in the reception center for a couple of months while they tried to
figure it out.
Finally,
they sent me to Keesler Field, Mississippi, later to be sent to some
communication program. It was during my stay there that I learned about the
black Air Corps. I saw in the newspaper, maybe the Amsterdam News, a picture
and a short article on graduates from a bombardier navigation program. To me
this seemed more like something I could do rather than being a fighter pilot,
which was really the only Air Force option I had known about. So doubting that
I would ever be sent back to school, I decided to apply to the aviation cadet
program. It turns out that getting into that program was a little like applying
to MIT. You had to get letters of recommendation—my parents assisted me in
that—and you were interviewed and took exams. Finally, I was admitted into the
program. But as I didn’t immediately go into the program, I continued to do
basic training over and over. I’m not sure of all the details, but I do know
that they had lost my papers. I couldn’t get off of the drill field to find out
what had happened, because if you asked what happened to your record, they just
thought you were trying to screw off. They’d say, “No! You have to go to
training.” Finally, in desperation, I went against orders to the office to see
the sergeant. He listened to me, looked up my record, and then said something
like, “But you’re in 747 and you should be in 707.” He then proceeded to take
my paper from one envelope and move it to another, and the next week I shipped
out.
It was a
typical military screwup of the time, but I entered a pre-flight training
program at Tuskegee, Alabama, on the college campus. You spent, I don’t know,
maybe three months learning things pertaining to aviation. You were “braced,”
the military term for hazed. They tried to run the program as though it was
West Point. They marched and they sang. There was a certain esprit de corps to
it. I recall it with fascination, but it was at that point that I was able to
elect to go into bombardier navigation, primarily bombardiering, and I went off
to several schools in Florida and Texas.
At the end of the training, I was made a second lieutenant and sent to Godman Army Air Field, which was an airbase next to Fort Knox. There at that base was a black B25 bomb group being trained. This group, even though it was late in the war, had not yet gone overseas. The reason was interesting. They were still at Godman, even though it was inadequate to prepare a group to go overseas, for it had too limited runways, among other problems, and that was largely because of racial prejudice.
This bomb
group, when it was initially formed in Michigan, had been formed from black
officers, many of whom had been overseas in the 99th Fighter Group, and some
white officers with bomber experience. After the group was formed, the black
officers were not permitted to use the officers’ club on the Michigan base.
They had objected, so the Air Force, rather than let them use the officers’
club, moved the whole training program to Godman Field. There they couldn’t get
trained, but the white officers in the group could be invited to the Fort Knox
officers’ club and the black officers could use the Godman officers’ club.
So when I
arrived as a lieutenant with training in bombing, I was surplus and was told,
like many other officers who arrived during the same period, “We haven’t got
anything for you to do right now, but you should use these bombing trainers and
feel free to do anything else you like.” As a young man, I guess I was about
nineteen, that was marvelous. I had wings, I was a second lieutenant, and I
could go anywhere in the country. If I were stopped by military police, which
was rare, and asked what I was doing, I’d say, “I’m following verbal orders of
the commanding officers.” And that was it. Fellows like me just went all over
the country. I worked on my problems of getting to know girls, and for a
relatively short period had a fair amount of pleasure.
This period
came to an end when the Air Force, no longer training great numbers of aviation
cadets, decided their solution to getting the bomb group trained and keeping
the officers’ club separate. They decided to move the 477th to an abandoned
cadet field in Freeman Field, Indiana. The plan was to call the black officers
“trainees,” offer them the cadet club, and reserve the officers’ club for white
officers. The trainee term was to apply to any black officer, even the black
flight surgeon in the 477th.
This plan did not escape many of the members
of the 477th. I think of Bill Coleman, who later became Secretary of
Transportation and whom I knew from Camp Atwater and saw again in Cambridge
while he was at the Harvard Law School. He saw through the plan as soon as the
move was announced. He came to me, and to other officers like me who were not
officially members of the bomb group but were members of the base waiting for
positions to open up, and said, “Now listen, this thing about trainee officers
using the cadet club does not apply to you, so when you arrive at the base you
can use the regular officers’ club.” This is exactly what we did when we arrived
at the new base. We just walked into the officers’ club. They immediately said
to us, “You shouldn’t be here, you’re under arrest.”
How many black officers were there?
Well, it
turned out by that time there were about a hundred who were involved in this
whole uprising. The next day they prepared a written set of orders, saying
essentially, “This is to inform you that you must use the trainee officers’
club,” and we were to be asked to read and sign the paper saying that we
understood and would obey the order. So all the people who had been under
arrest were asked to come to headquarters and one by one required to sign.
I always
think of this because it was entertaining. I joined a line which had formed in
this building at the offices where we thought we were to go in. I was well
along the line at another door when suddenly they opened the door in front of
me, so I was the first person into the interrogation room. I entered the room
and there was a captain or a colonel and a few enlisted men who looked like
they had been dragged in to be witnesses. I was told, “You understand that
there is an arrangement here where you are to use the trainees’ club and not
the officers’ club.” I said I understood that. They said, “Do you agree that
you’ll do it?” I said no, because that was what everybody agreed they would say
and I refused to sign the paper. Then you were sent out another door so that
you wouldn’t see or communicate with the others waiting to come into the room.
Most of the waiting officers did as I did, although some officers who were
mature, had their families with them there, and felt they had an investment in
a career did agree. But most didn’t care and thought it an obscene racist joke.
They just
took the entire squadron and moved them all back to Godman Field, Kentucky. It
was so absurd, some of the fellows put signs on the moving trucks about going
back to their “Old Kentucky Home.” At this point it had hit the newspapers. My
wife tells me how she saw “101 Black Officers Arrested” in some of the black
newspapers at the time. Anyway, what happened was that the bomb group
languished at Godman Field for a month or two. Finally, the whole thing was
dropped. They relieved the very prejudiced colonel of training, fired all the
people who were white, and brought in the black Colonel B. O. Davis, Jr., and
some of his officers to reconstitute the group under his direction.
It turned
out that they never could get the group finally trained enough to go overseas.
In reading recently about General Davis’s life, I learned that even he had a
hard time. Even though he was colonel of the base, he still couldn’t use the
facilities with his family at Fort Knox. This is the General Davis, right? Both
father and son were generals. The Davis I am talking about is the one who had
been colonel over the 332nd Fighter Group in Italy. What happened for me
personally was that I was then allowed to go into pilot training, so I went
back to Tuskegee. While I was there, Japan surrendered and I came back to
school. So the whole thing faded for me. As a single man and young, it was just
an interesting experience with the South. It had ended.
I returned
to school in the middle of the year. I had known my wife before I had gone into
college. We had known each other as kids. We married the year I returned from
the Army.
So she’s from New York as well?
Right, she’s
from Brooklyn. During my Brooklyn period, I got to know her and had quite a
crush on her. When she graduated from Hunter College, we married and returned
together to Cambridge. It made an immense difference in my life. I often kid
her by saying I waited until she finished so that she could keep me in the
style “to which I had grown accustomed.” She had majored in psychology but was
in a teaching program as well, so we both thought she would teach in the Boston
or Cambridge school system. When we got up to Boston, we learned that at that
time married women were not allowed to teach. So she worked in various places
and finally ended up at the Charlestown Public Library. I had two more years to
complete at MIT, which was an entirely different world, with returning veterans
like myself on the GI Bill.
The above
pages are only an excerpt from the entire interview by Dr. Clarence G. Williams…..
The
following information is from Robert L. Dunbar – Digital Humanities Producer of
MIT Black History. Dr. Williams and Mr.
Dunbar had an impromptu conversation about
the Victor Ransom interview. Mr.
Dunbar recalled a point of memory from the interview.
Mr.
Dunbar recalled the year President Harry Truman signed the executive order to
integrate the Military Armed Forces (1948) Executive Order 9981: Desegregation of
the Armed Forces. On July 26, 1948, President Harry S. Truman
signed this executive order establishing the President's Committee on Equality
of Treatment and Opportunity in the Armed Services, committing the government
to integrating the segregated military.
Robert’s father was a member of the US Army Military and signed up in
1948. Solomon Dunbar, Jr. served from
1948 to 1978 with 10 years in the reserve.
His commission was Sergeant First Class (SFC) as a commissioned officer.
When he signed up at Fort Gordon, GA to join the US Army, he did not want to be
assigned to the Motor Pool, or the Transportation Pool, or Kitchen Duty, or MP
Duty.
He requested to go fighting where the MASH (Medical Army Medical
Hospital) Units would be in War. He
signed up at Fort Gordon, GA where the Army had the most advanced military
Hospital after Bethesda Military Medical Hospital in Washington, DC. War broke out in 1950 within Korea. SFC Dunbar had protested the mistreatment his
right to be treated equally. He was
thrown into Army “jail” for a short period of time, because of his refusal to accept
his assignment. After about a week or
two, his assignment was changed to serving in Korea among the Army’s first roll
out of the MASH Units.
The following excerpt that Victor Ransom participated in the “protest”
was a fine example of successfully challenging the status quo of maintaining
the “Jim Crow” standard. Victor Ransom
and other officers had stood up against the military informal practice of
segregation in Godman Field Kentucky.
The news of that event went nationwide within the various military
installations as well. His act of courage along with the other Black Soldiers
changed a lifetime of gallant soldiers.
My father was awarded the Bronze Star in the Korean War, and was
interred at Arlington National Cemetery in 1992.
From Victor
Ransom……“They just took the entire squadron and moved them all back to Godman
Field, Kentucky. It was so absurd, some of the fellows put signs on the moving
trucks about going back to their “Old Kentucky Home.” At this point it had hit
the newspapers. My wife tells me how she saw “101 Black Officers Arrested” in
some of the black newspapers at the time. Anyway, what happened was that the
bomb group languished at Godman Field for a month or two. Finally, the whole
thing was dropped. They relieved the very prejudiced colonel of training, fired
all the people who were white, and brought in the black Colonel B. O. Davis,
Jr., and some of his officers to reconstitute the group under his direction. “
Excerpts from
Victor Ransom - Technology and the Dream Interview with Dr. Clarence G. WilliamsAdditional narrative from Robert L. Dunbar, i.e. for SFC Solomon Dunbar, Jr. commissioned at Fort Gordon GA