The
following is an excerpt of a letter received
from Hank Van Cleef relating to his work at
the James Millen Company in the late 50's. I
have edited the text to make it more
understandable to the readers of this page.
So far as
working for Millen goes, that was a long time
ago, 1956-7, which is 42-43 years now. I
worked in what was known as "the lab" for Wade
Caywood, and with Dick Freeman. We had several
co-ops from Northeastern come and go, who
provided technician labor beyond what the
three of us did. I don't remember Jim Millen
at all. He did not come out our way very
often, and I don't think he spent much time at
150 Exchange St.
I joke that the
place was a real "garage operation." It was
the second floor over a Pontiac dealer. I was
surprised at how small the place really was,
after having worked for Packard.
You don't see
mention of Phil Eyrick in other documents
about the Millen Company, and often only
passing mention to Fran Bearse. Phil went to
work for Millen at National Co. and was the
one who did the mechanical design on the
NC-100 sliding coil trays. He came over with
Millen in '39 and was nominally "general
manager" while I was there, although spent
most of his time expediting orders of one
thing or another. He wasn't in very good
health; had a heart condition, and, I think,
was out of the place shortly after I left.
Fran Bearse
really ran the place. She was always "Miss
Bearse" to me. Just about anything that
happened in that company went through her, and
if you needed something, it was "talk to Miss
Bearse," although Phil handled things like
salaries and raises. I have forgotten who told
me, or exactly when it was, but I think it was
just before I went to Tektronix in '60 that
she went into her office one afternoon to take
a nap, and never woke up. After that, Wade
Caywood had the titles and essentially ran the
place.
Wade was hired
fresh out of MIT in '39. Howard Green, who ran
the coil winding shop, I think was there at
the start, along with Phil and a couple of
tool and diemakers who were real craftsmen.
Millen was a mechanical man, and while he was
a ham, I don't think he did much if any
electrical design work himself. Dick Freeman
was a co-op from the early fifties who stayed
with Millen after he graduated. I don't know
what Millen did for those folks when he closed
the doors. The place was pretty much a
components operation when I was there, with a
few runs of various assembled products,
principally, the grid dips. There were a whole
bunch of "RCA" (made by Millen) 158 and 160
scopes that were in the lab---maybe ten of
them---and we used a couple in test jigs. When
one conked out, we'd put a tag on it with a
tentative diagnosis, then look at the others
and see which ones could be fixed, and they
were all pretty tired old soldiers. Also, some
uncalibrated BC-221's from a production run,
and the most serious scope was a P-4 from a
WWII run that had, I think, a Sylvania
nameplate. But the core of the business in the
mid-fifties was mechanical components,
magnetic delay lines (all wound on one machine
by one skilled operator), and coil products.
Most of my work was with coils, and I worked
pretty closely with Howard Green most of the
time.
Probably the
stuff you've gotten from others, and
particularly the articles, are much more
comprehensive and balanced than anything I
could add. To say that I was pretty junior at
the time is an understatement, and working
there was quite an education. What I still
find suprising is that a small loft-garage
operation like that could have been such a
large presence in electronics for as long as
it was. All of their products were quality
stuff, and the Millen name was presold through
the industry.
Excerpt
from letter (email) dated July 20, 1999
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