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  1. Joseph Henry, 1797-1878. The first Smithsonian Secretary, Joseph Henry, served from 1846 to 1878. A professor at the College of New Jersey, he was a physicist who conducted pioneering research in electromagnetism and helped set the Smithsonian on its course. Henry was born in 1797 in Albany, New York, to William and Ann Henry.

  2. Feb 26, 2019 · Joseph Henry (born December 17, 1797 in Albany, New York) was a physicist known for his pioneering work in electromagnetism, his support and promotion of scientific advancement in America, and for his role as the first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, which he helped shape into an academic and research center.

  3. Henry, Joseph (1797-1878), the leading American scientist after Benjamin Franklin until Willard Gibbs, was a professor at Princeton from 1832 to 1846. His chief scientific contributions were in the field of electromagnetism, where he discovered the phenomenon of self-inductance.

  4. Sep 4, 2015 · Lived 1797 – 1878. Joseph Henry was at the forefront of the great electromagnetic advances of the 1830s. He built the world’s most powerful electromagnets and made practical breakthroughs that allowed Samuel Morse to invent the telegraph. The unit of electrical inductance is named the henry in his honor, with the symbol H.

  5. Joseph Henry was an American scientist who pioneered the construction of strong, practical electromagnets and built one of the first electromagnetic motors.

  6. Joseph Henry, who became Secretary of the Smithsonian upon its establishment in 1846, was the first in a long line of scientists selected to lead the Institution. Henry was a physicist who had taught for some twenty years, first at a college preparatory school in New York and then at Princeton.

  7. www.encyclopedia.com › science-and-technology › physics-biographiesJoseph Henry | Encyclopedia.com

    May 29, 2018 · Joseph Henry. Henry, Joseph. views 2,285,170 updated May 29 2018. Henry, Joseph. ( b. Albany, New York, 17 December, 1797; d. Washington, D.C., 13 May 1878) physics. Henry was born to a poor family of Scottish descent and raised as a Presbyterian, a faith he followed throughout his life.

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