Background
He was born in Wellingborough, England, the son of a Wesleyan minister, and attended the University of London.
He was born in Wellingborough, England, the son of a Wesleyan minister, and attended the University of London.
In 1906 he was awarded his Doctor of Science with a dissertation on photographic theory.
From 1906 until 1912 he worked for Wratten and Wainwright, Limited., assisting Frederick Wratten in developing the first panchromatic photographic plates, as well as light filters and safelights for the darkroom. In 1912 the Eastman Kodak company acquired Wratten and Wainwright because they were interested in the skills Mees provided. He moved to the United States and set up the Kodak Research Laboratories in Rochester, New York, and become the first director
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he became an American citizen so that he could have access to high security war projects and information.
Later he was named vice president in charge of Research and Development for Eastman-Kodak, and remained at that position until he retired in 1955. He was awarded the Franklin Medal in 1954.
During his career he published 100 scientific papers and 60 other works. Mees served as the first president of the board of trustees of George Eastman House from 1947 until 1954.
There is a biography of Mees by Geoffrey Crawley in Amateur Photographer 12 December 2009, p.
Progress Medal, Royal Photographic Society, Great Britain. Henry Draper Medal, National Academy of Sciences, 1936. Franklin Meda Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society. Fellow of the Royal Society, 1939. Inductee, International Photography Hall of Fame, 1972. The C.E.K. Mees Award is the highest research honor given by the Kodak company. The C.E.K. Mees Medal, awarded in odd-numbered years by the Optical Society of America, is named after him and was endowed by the Mees family. The University of Rochester"s C.E.K. Mees Observatory is named after him. The crater Mees on the Moon is named after him. Mees Solar Observatory on the summit of Haleakala is named after him.
Royal Society.