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Kettering was born July 15, 1907, in Bellevue, Kentucky, to architect and marble importer Norman and Clara Weiffenbach. [1] She was their only child. [3]She attended Moraine Park School, where she met husband-to-be Eugene Kettering, [4] Margaret Morrison Carnegie College, Carnegie Tech, and Lutherville Seminary.
Kettering married Olive Williams of Ashland, Ohio, on August 1, 1905. [22] Their only child, Eugene Williams Kettering, was born on April 20, 1908. Eugene joined Winton Engine in 1930, which was acquired by General Motors and was eventually incorporated into the General Motors Electro-Motive Division (EMD).
Eugene W. Kettering, son of Charles F. Kettering, joined Winton Engine in 1930. He moved to Detroit in 1936, and was a central figure in the development of the 567 and the Detroit Diesel 6-71 . He moved to EMD in 1938, became chief engineer at EMD in 1948, then division director in 1956 and subsequently research assistant to the general manager ...
Health care was a primary focus of Charles Kettering, so Eugene and Virginia led efforts to open a local area hospital in his honor. Ground was broken on July 7, 1961. In 1964, Charles F. Kettering Memorial Hospital opened under the leadership of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. [5] [6]
Through the 1960s, Eugene Kettering, son of Charles F. Kettering, led the project to build a permanent structure to house the collections and became the first chairman of the board of the Air Force Museum Foundation.
Eugene W. Kettering, son of Charles Kettering, led Winton's side of the development project. In 1933 EMC designed the power setups for the Zephyr and M-10000 streamliners , a breakthrough in the power and speed available with their propulsion systems.
“Weird Al” Yankovic will visit some of the largest venues of his career, including New York’s Madison Square Garden and Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, on the Bigger and Weirder 2025 tour, which ...
Kettering Labs is home to the School of Engineering. Named after engineer and inventor Eugene Kettering, it includes classrooms, labs, offices, a machine shop, a wind tunnel, and the Innovation Center. [35] The Jesse Philips Humanities Center was built in 1993 and named for former university trustee Jesse Philips.