Charles F. Kettering: Doing the Right Thing
at the Right Time
By Richard P. Scharchburg, Thompson Professor of Industrial History

Charles Franklin Kettering was born on a farm
near Loudonville, Ohio, August 29, 1876. After
graduation from high school, he accepted a
teaching position in a one-room rural school.
Although highly successful as a teacher, his mind
was set on going to college.
In the summer of 1896, he entered the College of
Wooster (Ohio). As a result of long and intense
hours of study, his eyesight deteriorated to the
point that he was forced to leave college and
return to teaching.
In 1898, he entered the engineering school at
Ohio State, but again his poor eyesight forced him
to drop out during his freshman year. For the next
two years he worked on a telephone line crew,
and then once again entered Ohio State, finally
completing his electrical engineering degree in
1904.
After graduation, Kettering took a job in the
inventions department at the National Cash
Register Company (NCR) in Dayton, Ohio. There
he developed an electric motor for cash registers, the OK Charge Phone for department stores and
several other contributions to a revolution then taking place in business machines.
In 1909, Kettering and Edward A. Deeds, his associate at NCR, formed their own industrial research
laboratory, the Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company (later known as DELCO). Within three
years, they had produced a new all-electric starting, ignition and lighting system for automobiles.
The system first appeared as standard equipment on the 1912 Cadillac and as its use spread,
women could conveniently become drivers without the assistance of a chauffeur. DELCO was
eventually sold to General Motors and became the foundation for the General Motors Research
Corporation of which Kettering became vice president in 1920.
The list of innovations and inventions that are credited to Charles F.
(nicknamed "Boss") Kettering is impressive. His book of patents
contains more than 300 separate applications that range from a
portable lighting system for farms to coolants for refrigerators and air
conditioners. Other patents included a World War I "aerial torpedo," a
device for the treatment of venereal disease, and an incubator for
premature infants. Duco paint and Ethyl gasoline were also his ideas
and he was instrumental in their development. He had interest in the
development of diesel engines, solar energy, and was a pioneer in the
application of magnetism to medical diagnostic techniques.
He and his wife, Olive, had one son, Eugene Williams Kettering, who
worked with his father on diesel engine development and was largely
responsible for the adoption of the diesel engine for railroad use.
"Boss Ket" retired from General Motors Research in 1947 but served as
a consultant over the next decade. Following a series of strokes, he
died on November 24, 1958.