Queen's University. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Identity area

Type of entity

Corporate body

Authorized form of name

Queen's University. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Description area

Dates of existence

n.d.

History

The study of electricity began at Queen's in 1894, with a special series of lectures and, as the calendar boasted, "demonstrations of this wonderful form of energy...on telegraphy, telephony, electric lighting, and the driving of machinery." Queen's first real specialist in electricity, L.W. Gill, arrived at the University in 1900, and is generally considered the founder of the Department of Electrical Engineering. Electrical studies have changed drastically since then, but the Department's late Victorian goal to study "electricity in all its variations" still holds. The Department now teaches and conducts research in such fields as communications, fibre-optics, micro-electronics, power and transportation, electromagnetism, biomedicine, and electronic signal and image processing. There are approximately 25 full-time faculty in the Department, which has been located, since 1987, in Walter Light Hall [named after one of the Department's most successful graduates, Walter Light, former CEO of Northern Telecom, and Chair of Queen's Board of Trustees (1985-1990)], and the Stewart-Pollack Wing of Fleming Hall. The Department is part of the Faculty of Applied Science.

Places

Legal status

Functions, occupations and activities

Mandates/sources of authority

Internal structures/genealogy

General context

Relationships area

Access points area

Subject access points

Place access points

Occupations

Control area

Authority record identifier

CA QUA02555

Institution identifier

Rules and/or conventions used

Status

Draft

Level of detail

Dates of creation, revision and deletion

Language(s)

  • English

Script(s)

Sources

Maintenance notes

  • Clipboard

  • Export

  • EAC

Related subjects

Related places