W.
Edwards Deming
William
Edwards Deming was born in Sioux City, Iowa on 14 October 1900 to
William Albert Deming and Pluma Irene Edwards.
As an adult, he used the
name W. Edwards Deming.
His brother, Robert Edwards
was born on 11 May 1902; his sister, Elizabeth Marie, later Elizabeth Deming
Hood was born on 21 January 1909.
The family lived
at 121 Bluff Street in Sioux City. In 1904, they moved to the Edwards
farm located in Polk City, between Ames and Des Moines. The farm
was owned by Pluma’s father, Henry Coffin Edwards (Pluma’s mother,
Elizabeth Grant, died when Pluma was young).
In an effort to encourage
settlement in the West, the United States government granted parcels of land
(usually 40 or 80 acres) to citizens who agreed to settle, farm or develop the
land.
William Albert Deming filed
on 40 acres in Camp Coulter, later named Powell, Wyoming. The family moved
to Wyoming in 1907. They rented a house in Cody until they could build on their
own land. William Albert learned that his parcel was poor, useless for farming.
Their first
dwelling was a shelter, rectangular in shape (like a railroad box
car), covered with tar paper, often referred to as a tar paper shack.
Water was pumped from a well. There was little protection from
the harsh weather. The family was often cold, hungry and in debt.
Eighty years
later, on a visit to Powell, Dr. Deming learned that the 40 acres
was still referred to as the Deming Addition.
Pluma Irene
and William Albert Deming were well-educated and emphasized the
importance of education to their children. Pluma had studied
in San Francisco and was a musician. William Albert had studied
mathematics and law. Young Ed Deming attended school in Powell
and held odd jobs to help support the family.
In 1917, he enrolled in
the University of Wyoming at Laramie. In 1921 he graduated with a B.S. in electrical
engineering. In 1925, he received an M.S. from the University of Colorado and
in 1928, a Ph.D. from Yale University. Both graduate degrees were in mathematics
and mathematical physics.
Dr. Deming studied
music theory, played several instruments and composed two masses,
several canticles and an easily sung version of the Star Spangled
Banner.
Dr. Deming married
Agnes Bell in 1922 in Wyoming. Agnes and Ed had a daughter, Dorothy.
Agnes died in 1930. Dr. Deming married Lola Elizabeth Shupe in 1932.
They had two daughters, Diana and Linda. Dorothy died in 1984.
Dr. and Mrs.
Deming lived in Washington, D. C. for the remainder of their lives
in the house that they bought in 1936. With her family at her side,
Mrs. Deming died on 25 June 1986. Dr. Deming, surrounded by his
family, died at his home on 20 December 1993.
International
Activities
Statistician,
Allied Mission to Observe the Greek Elections, January-April 1946;
July-October 1946 Consultant in sampling to the Government of India,
January and February 1947; December 1951; March 1971
Delegate from the A.A.A.S. to the Indian Science Congress, New Delhi,
January 1947
Adviser in sampling techniques to the Supreme Command of the Allied
Powers, Tokyo, 1947 and 1950
Teacher and consultant to Japanese industry, through the Union of
Japanese Scientists and Engineers 1950, 1951, 1952, 1955, 1960,
1965
Member of the United Nations Sub-Commission on Statistical Sampling,
1947-52
Consultant to the Census of Mexico, to the Bank of Mexico, and to
the Ministry of Economy, 1954, 1955
Consultant., Statistisches Bundesamt, Wiesbaden, 1953
Consultant to the Central Statistical Office of Turkey, 1959-1962
Lecturer, London School of Economics, March 1964
Lecturer, Institut de Statistique de l'Universite de Paris, March
1964
Consultant to the China Productivity Center, Taiwan, 1970, 1971
Lecturer in Santiago, Córdoba (Argentina), and Buenos Aires, under
the auspices of the Inter American Statistical Institute, 1971.
Honors
Taylor Key award,
American Management Association, 1983
The Deming prize
was instituted by the Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers
and is awarded each year in Japan to a statistician for contributions
to statistical theory. The Deming prize for application is awarded
to a company for improved use of statistical theory in organization,
consumer research, design of product and production.
Recipient of
the Second Order Medal of the Sacred Treasure, from the Emperor
of Japan, 1960, for improvement of quality and of Japanese economy,
through the statistical control of quality.
Recipient of
the Shewhart Medal for 1955, from the American Society for Quality
Control.
Elected in 1972
most distinguished graduate from the University of Wyoming.
Elected in 1983
to the National Academy of Engineering.
Inducted into
the Science and Technology Hall of Fame, Dayton, 1986.
In 1980, the
Metropolitan section of the American Society for Quality Control
established the annual Deming Medal for the improvement of quality
and productivity.
Recipient of
the Samuel S. Wilks Award from the American Statistical Association
in 1983.
Recipient of
the Distinguished Career in Science award from the National Academy
of Sciences in 1988.
Recipient
of the National Medal of Technology from President Reagan in 1987.
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