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PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING 33
503 pp., Illus. (The Section ‘‘Plotting and
Assembly of Field Data,” pp. 71-122, in-
cludes a description of relevant photogram-
metric techniques.)
Baldwin, Mark; Whitlock, H. W., and Smith,
Howard M., “The Use of Aerial Photographs
in Soil Mapping,” PHOTOGRAMMETRIC EN-
GINEERING, Vol. XIII, pp. 532-536 (1947).
Kellog, Charles E., “World Food Production:
The Role of the Photogrammetrist,” PHOTO-
GRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING, Vol. XVI, pp.
94-100 (1950).
Simonson, Roy W., “Use of Aerial Photographs
in Soil Surveys," PHOTOGRAMMETRIC EN-
GINEERING, Vol. XVI, pp. 308—315 (1950).
Rourke, John D., and Smith, Howard M.,
“The Use of Air Photos for Soil Classification
and Mapping in the Field." PHOTOGRAM-
METRIC ENGINEERING, Vol. XVII, pp. 738-
747, illus. (1951).
Whitlock, H. W., and Crook, D. K., “Use of
Aerial Photographs in the Publication of
Soil Maps," PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEER-
ING, Vol. XVII, pp. 747-754 (1951).
III. COMMERCIAL. ACTIVITIES. IN PHOTOGRAMMETRY
ABRAMS
Talbert Abrams began taking pictures
in 1916 from the top of the Dime Savings
Bank Building in Detroit, Michigan. He
joined the United States Marine Corps in
1916 and to obtain aerial photography he
flew along the Gulf Coast in Texas in
1917, and the Bahama Islands and Florida
coast near Miami in 1918. With the First
Division of Marine Corps, Squadron
E. U. S., he flew the coastline of the Bay
de Port au Prince in Haiti in 1919. Later
he flew on the first air mail route in the
United States between New York and
Washington when the U. S. Air Mail
Service was formed.
Mr. Abrams continued aerial photo-
graphic work with the Michigan Aero
Service Corporation in 1921 and with
Michigan Airways Inc. In 1922 he formed
his own company, the Abrams Aerial
Survey Corporation; this company was
incorporated in 1923.
Between 1922 and 1924 many aerial
photographic projects were completed for
cities, industries, and real estate develop-
ments. In 1925 road location photography
was flown for the Michigan State Highway
Department. This was followed by many
other highway mapping projects through-
out the country as the feasibility of aerial
photography became apparent. Among the
early photographic flying for governmental
work was the photographic surveying and
mapping project of Isle Royale in Lake
Superior for the U. S. Geological Survey
in 1930, and the photographic mapping
of Puerto Rico in the West Indies in 1935
and again in 1936 for the Puerto Rican
Reconstruction Administration.
The first product manufactured by the
Abrams companies was a mirror stereo-
scope in 1922,—a simple box with mirrors
set at 45? angles. Research and develop-
ment of photogrammetric instruments has
been increased steadily and their manu-
facture is today the most important
function of the company.
Patents credited to the company are as
follows:
26 Mar. 1940 2194682
20 Feb. 1945 2369634
Contour Finder
Contour Finder
Stereoscopes 2 Jan. 1945 . 2366228
Automatic Camera
Mount 27 July 1948 2446096
Lens Heater 8 June 1948 2442913
Airplane 7 Mar. 1939 113649
Trademark 12 May 1931 291538
Automatic Timers 3 May 1949 2468855
Stereoscopic Table 22 May 1951 163355
Electric Timers 30 May 1951 2573130
The Abrams Instrument Corporation
was organized in 1939 to handle the grow-
ing business of manufacturing photogram-
metric products. These products consisted
of tripods, gun cameras, stereoscopes, sun
compasses, radar cameras, aerial cameras,"
contour finders or plotters, tracing tables,
bomb release timers, rectoblique plotters,
oblique and vertical sketchmasters, radar
tracking recorders, slotted templet cutters,
photogrammetric computers, stereoscopic
plotting machine, intervalometers, elec-
tronic computers, X-ray cameras and re-
cording cameras, Lazy Dazy triangulators
(slotted metal arms), photographic print-
ers, and stereoscopes having 2, 4 and 10
power magnification.
The Abrams Aircraft Corporation, or-
ganized in 1937, designed and built the
Strato-Plane Explorer, The aircraft was
used for ten years on aerial photographic
mapping projects throughout the United
SEE