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  1. Stuart Warren Cramer (March 31, 1868 – July 2, 1940) was an American engineer, inventor, and contractor, who gained prominence after designing and building near 150 cotton mills in the southern United States.

  2. Engineer, inventor, author, and organizer, Stuart W. Cramer (March 31, 1868-July 2, 1940) was a man of many talents. Responsible for planning nearly 150 cotton mills from Virginia to Texas, he was also agent or southern manager for numbers of large manufacturers of textile machinery and equipment for various facilities including power plants.

  3. history.textiles.ncsu.edu › textile-people › stuart-w-cramerStuart W. Cramer | Textiles History

    Stuart W. Cramer. 1868-1940. A mill engineer without equal in the late 19th and early 20th century, Stuart W. Cramer was responsible for the design of 150 mills -nearly one-third of the textile mills built in the South during that period. A native of Thomasville, NC, a town tucked away in the Piedmont far from the ocean, the family with little ...

  4. 1 de may. de 2012 · Cramer, Stuart W. “Recent Development in Air Conditioning,” in Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Convention of the American Cotton Manufacturers Association, Held at Asheville, N.C. May 16-17, 1906 .

  5. STUART WARREN CRAMER and HIS WORK in AIR CONDITIONING. by Brian Roberts, CIBSE Heritage Group. Stuart Warren Cramer, 1868-1940. Stuart Cramer was born on 31 March, 1868, in Thomasville, North Carolina. He studied Naval Engineering at the United States Naval Academy, graduating in 1888.

  6. 31 Mar. 1868–2 July 1940. Stuart Warren Cramer, leader in the development and improvement of textile mills, inventor, and leader in the Republican party in North Carolina, was born in Thomasville to John Thomas and Mary Jane Thomas Cramer.

  7. 24 de may. de 2012 · Willis Haviland Carrier may get credit as the first to devise a system for simultaneously cooling, dehumidifying, circulating and cleansing the air. But it’s a Tar Heel, Stuart W. Cramer, who coined the term to describe the system.