Victor J. Andrew
Victor J. Andrew
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Victor J. Andrew

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Victor J. Andrew

Victor “Doc” John Andrew (August 31, 1902 - October 30, 1971) was an electrical engineer and the founder of Andrew Corporation, a world-leading telecommunications manufacturing company previously located in Orland Park, Illinois.

Victor J. Andrew (originally named John Victor Andrew), was born to parents Irving Andrew and Ruby Perkins Andrew in a family farmhouse in Medina County, Ohio. He entered school at the age of six and continued for four years; the last two years being failures to pass the third grade. His mother then took him out of school and educated him herself. She had worked as a schoolteacher in a one-room schoolhouse for eight years before marrying her husband, Irving.

Andrew recalls that his mother didn't specifically require him to study anything, but instead would incorporate lessons on various subjects during everyday life. He states, “The four years I was out of school were primarily playing, usually alone, going a half mile in various directions from home, generally in the rural areas.” He would eventually return to school at the age of fourteen.

In his earlier years, his interest in the physical sciences, particularly the electrical sciences began to grow. His older cousins were amateur radio operators and had given him radio equipment to experiment with. He would begin to construct things with whatever he could find, such as discarded electrical parts from the city dump. At the age of fifteen, he became the first mobile radio serviceman in Wooster, Ohio. At seventeen he had his own operating amateur radio station.

Andrew began his higher education at the College of Wooster. He found interest in the fields of mathematics, physics, and economics. From 1923 to 1924 he served as chief engineer of WABW radio station owned by the college. Since he had already taken all of the math and science courses offered by the College of Wooster, he did research in association with the U.S. Naval Laboratory in Washington D.C. on radio wave propagation.

After graduating with a Bachelor of Science in 1926 he moved on to become a junior engineer at the United States Army Signal Corps Laboratories at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. Although he hated the social values of New Jersey, claiming they were “stuck up”, he soon met his future wife, Aileen Sharkey. After working in Fort Monmouth for fifteen months, he applied for graduate school at the University of Chicago for his master's degree, with the intention of acquiring a PhD.

After he graduated with his masters in 1928, he began to look for work, although it was hard to find. He moved to Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts to work for Westinghouse Electric at the firm's x-ray tube facility. This didn't last long though, as he was let go after the stock market crash on October 29, 1929. Given the opportunity to continue his studies, the couple moved back to Chicago so he would be able to pursue his PhD at the University of Chicago.

After graduating with a PhD in physics in 1932, he began to look for new work. However, he lost two other jobs by 1934 due to the depression. Even though his hope was diminishing he began to work at Doolittle Radio Inc. With his position undefined, and the company rapidly declining, he searched for a way for the company to make more money. After finding the inventions of his predecessors going untouched he eventually became a salesman, selling these designs. After about two years he quit and took several business courses so that he could start a similar business.

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