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Patrick Eugene Haggerty (17 March 1914 – 1 October 1980) was an American engineer and businessman. He was a co-founder and former president and chairman of Texas Instruments, Incorporated (TI).
Patrick E. Haggerty, IRE President, 1962, was the first general manager of the Geophysical Service Incorporated’s Laboratory and Manufacturing division. He became executive vice president and director of Texas Instruments, which was formerly Geophysical Service Incorporated.
Patrick E. Haggerty. Texas Instruments. 1958–1976. Industry: Computers & Electronics. Era: 1950. Haggerty led Texas Instruments into the manufacture of transistors - the first to make them cheaply enough to be commercially viable.
Pat Haggerty was widely known as a warm, kind, and gentle man, not without a touch of Irish temper when faced with obstacles to achievements or principles. He was a humanist, a moral and deeply religious man, an inquisitive scholar of keen intellect and extraordinary reasoning powers.
2 days ago · Texas Instruments was founded by Cecil H. Green, J. Erik Jonsson, Eugene McDermott, and Patrick E. Haggerty in 1951. McDermott was one of the original founders of Geophysical Service in 1930. McDermott, Green, and Jonsson were GSI employees who purchased the company in 1941 on the day before Pearl Harbor was attacked.
Patrick Eugene Haggerty (17 March 1914 – 1 October 1980) was an American engineer and businessman. He was a co-founder and former president and chairman of Texas Instruments, Incorporated (TI).
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At Texas Instruments in Dallas, the story was different. Patrick Eugene Haggerty, then the company's executive vice president, had caught an early vision of the transistor's potential, and it helped alter the course of commercial electronics.