Background
Francis Upton was the son of Elijah Wood Upton and Lucy Elizabeth Winchester.
inventor mathematician physicist
Francis Upton was the son of Elijah Wood Upton and Lucy Elizabeth Winchester.
Francis was 16 by this time and studying at Phillips Academy in Andover, after he received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1877 at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Master of Engineering. There he met and married his wife, Elizabeth F. Perry. Francis Upton also attended Berlin University and Princeton University.
Elijah was well educated and after, he did European traveling Francis was the first ever to officially receive his doctoral degree from Princeton University. Upton was hired by Edison in 1878 on the recommendation of the world famous "scientist-sage" Hermann von Helmholtz.
Upton had just finished a year of graduate studies with Helmholtz in Germany after obtaining his Master of Surgery from Princeton.
Helmholtz had recommended Upton to Edison as a man with good theoretical skills who might be just the type of assistant Edison was seeking. Edison was largely self-educated.
He was brimming over with ideas but needed someone with advanced mathematical skills who could do calculations and research the scientific literature to help solve intractable problems. Despite his inveterate suspicion of academic scientists, Edison found Upton highly engaging and quite useful.
They worked together on many key inventions such as the incandescent lamp, the watt-hour meter, the parallel circuit distribution grid and the new constant voltage dynamo.
Upton was of crucial importance to Edison in the design of Edison"s power plant and distribution system put into service at the Pearl Street generating station in Lower Manhattan on September 4, 1882. Upton published articles in Scribner"s Monthly and Scientific American. Since 1958, the Princeton University has had the Francis Upton Graduate Fellowships.
In 1894 Francis Robbins Upton left Edison"s business which he had managed up to his departure.
Upton returned after four years. He and Thomas started working on ore milling sand that Upton sold to concrete manufactures.
Upton eventually left the business in 1911 but still continued to sell bricks and concrete. Francis Robbins Upton died ten years later in Orange, New Jersey, on March 10, 1921.