Christopher Earl Brennen Oral History Interview
Interviewed by Shirley K. Cohen
Interview Sessions from 2002
- November 19, 2002
- December 3, 2002
Abstract
An interview in three sessions, November-December 2002, with Christopher E. Brennen, Hayman Professor of Mechanical Engineering, emeritus, in the Engineering Division. Dr. Brennen, a native of Northern Ireland who eventually became a U.S. citizen, received his undergraduate and graduate education at Oxford (PhD 1967) and came to Caltech as a postdoc in 1969 with Theodore Y. Wu, after a stint with George Gadd at the U.K.’s National Physical Laboratory. At Caltech, he was a research fellow, senior research fellow, and research associate before being appointed associate professor in 1976. He became a full professor in 1982 and received the Hayman chair in 2005, becoming emeritus in 2010. From 1993 to 1998, he was executive officer for mechanical engineering.
Dr. Brennen discusses his early work with Wu on locomotion of ciliated microorganisms and his later collaborations with Allan Acosta, Milton Plesset, and Rolf Sabersky, among others. He recalls his early teaching duties and emphasizes his concern with the welfare of Caltech’s undergraduates, in his role as master of student houses (1983-1987), dean of students (1988-1992), and vice president for student affairs (1998-2002). Describes atmosphere at Caltech during the Vietnam War and the height of the drug culture. Concludes with an overview of the careers of his own graduate students and expresses his hope that Caltech will continue working to attract top-level undergraduates.
Access the full archival record
Access a PDF version of the transcript [0.4 MB]
Christopher Earl Brennen Oral History Interview, interviewed by Shirley K. Cohen, Caltech Archives Oral History Project, November 19, 2002, December 3, 2002, http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_Brennen_C.