The Palo Alto History Project
William Shockley                                                                    
                                                                                
                                                                                     959 Waverley Street      
William Shockley: Paranoia Strikes Deep

It is unlikely that any Palo Altan has ever lived a life as important as William Shockley. As a young man
during World War II, he won the nation’s highest civilian honor for discoveries that saved thousands of
lives.  In 1956, he won the Nobel Prize in Physics for the invention of the transistor, a device that either
made possible or greatly improved nearly every modern gadget we use today.  He then moved west and
started the company that became the catalyst for the rise of Silicon Valley.  He was even named one of the
100 most important people of the 20th Century by Time Magazine in 1999.

And yet despite this resume of accomplishment and his indisputable intelligence, William Shockley always
seemed to find a way to allow his personality to spoil his own success.  Throughout his 79 years, Shockley
threw tantrums, fought petty disputes and turned his friends into enemies.  He divorced his first wife, severed
relations with his children and forced his brightest employees to leave his company and outshine him
elsewhere.  Finally, as an angry and bitter man in his retirement years, Shockley became the champion of an
angry and bitter theory.  His association with it would bring him scorn, ridicule and deep contempt from the
scientific community and the broader public.  In the end, his reputation in tatters and his accomplishments
largely overshadowed, William Shockley would die friendless and ignored, his own worst enemy.

William Shockley seemed to enter the world in the midst of a fight.  Born in London in 1910 to American
parents, Shockley’s early childhood was something between tempestuous and the taming of a beast.  When
William was just a month old, his father wrote in his diary that his child “gives signs of having a violent
temper.”  Indeed, he was soon biting and slapping his parents, who seemed completely incapable of coping
with their son’s rage.  “It is an odd day when he does not break something,” his father would write during
William’s toddler years.   At three years old, he hit a Dachshund between the eyes with a stone and one day
during his usual mealtime screaming fit, rocked his chair back, flipped it over and badly hit his head on a
metal radiator.

In 1913, the Shockleys moved to Palo Alto and lived in a small house at 959 Waverley Street.  Economic
instability and his parents’ obsession for complete privacy later led to a series of relocations from one
downtown home to another.  In Palo Alto, William’s temper improved little at first.  But ignoring psychiatric
recommendations for more socialization, his parents decided to home school William until age 8.  Finally,
feeling they were unable to keep him out of a school setting any longer, they sent him to the Homer Avenue
School for two years, where his behavior improved dramatically --- he even earned an “A” in comportment
in his first year.  As a teenager, William received more discipline at the Palo Alto Military Academy.  As his
biographer Joel Shurkin says, “Bill had learned to control his temper out in the world, saving it for [his
parents] where it was most useful.”  After his father’s death in 1925, he and his mother moved to Hollywood
where William eventually entered Caltech to pursue a degree in physics.  

After earning his Ph. D. from MIT and gaining employment at prestigious Bell Labs, the New Jersey
research wing of AT&T, Shockley’s plans would be sidetracked by Pearl Harbor.  But his accomplishments
in the next three plus war years were astounding.  It has been said that he saved thousands of lives without
ever leaving his desk, mostly through his work advancing Allied techniques for using radar equipment and
depth charges.  Later, he completely redesigned the training procedures for American bomber crews.  Near
the end of the war, he became an expert consultant to the office of the Secretary of War --- making him one
of the highest ranked civilian scientists outside of Los Alamos.  Remarkably, even before the war had begun,
he and colleague James Fisk, quite by accident, designed a nuclear reactor similar to the Manhattan Project
discovery that would lead to the Atomic Bomb.  For all his war efforts, Shockley was awarded the National
Medal of Merit.

Returning to Ma Bell after the war, Shockley was placed at the head of the 34-man Solid State Physics
Team, where Shockley oversaw a team of brilliant physicists including John Bardeen and Walter H.
Brattain.  Their task: To find a smaller and reliable alternative to the fragile and bulky glass vacuum tube
amplifiers that would not allow for a decent coast-to-coast call.  Often sitting at a blackboard, trading
theories and hypotheses, Shockley’s team used what he would later call “creative failure methodology.”
After a series of trial and error setbacks and detours, Bardeen and Brattain finally broke through during the
“magic month” of December 1947, inventing what would come to be called the transistor.  And while Bell
Labs quite rightly gave Shockley full credit as team leader, he would spend the next few years fuming over
having to learn of the great discovery over the phone.

After the discovery, Shockley worked tirelessly to add to the invention.  In his efforts, he invented an even
stronger amplifying device --- the junction transistor --- and then forged ahead to author what would
become the seminal work of his field, Electrons and Holes in Semiconductors, published in 1950.

The Shockley transistor would lead to other advances in transistor technology, eventually creating a vast new
industry that sat at the heart of all modern electronics.  As Joel Shurkin writes, “ Every transistor that powers
the electronic age, the tens of millions now in our homes and offices,  in our computers, watches, ovens,
airplanes, CAT scan equipment, cars, fax machines, cameras, spaceships, and yes, our telephones, is a
descendant of that device. Shockley's feat… was his life's greatest accomplishment.  It changed the world.”
Shockley then headed back west to further his invention and make some money off it --- opening up shop at
391 San Antonio Road in Mountain View, essentially Silicon Valley’s first startup.  Shockley had a great eye
for talent and since none of his Bell Labs colleagues would join him (he had by then ostracized Bardeen,
Brattain and most of the others), Shockley hired the best and the brightest from nearby engineering schools.

But Shockley’s managerial style would prove severe and suspicious.  As one friend would observe,
Shockley had a kind of reverse charisma --- when he walked into a room, you instantly took a disliking to
him.  In one bizarre incident, when a company secretary cut her thumb on a thumbtack that had been stuck
in the door, Shockley demanded that his employees take lie detector tests to find out how it got there.  
Eventually, the paranoia would lead to the 1957 defection of the so-called “Treacherous Eight,” who fled
Shockley Superconductor to form rival Fairchild Semiconductor --- eventually producing the first integrated
circuits and beating their former boss to the punch.  Many of the “Treacherous Eight” would later start
spinoff companies, including Intel and National Semiconductor, ushering in the next generation of Silicon
Valley.  They would also manage to get rich while Shockley’s company tanked.

In the 1960’s after taking a professorship at Stanford University, Shockley became nearly obsessed with
genetics --- a field in which he was untrained, but incredibly passionate.  In 1965, he preached at a
conference that the human race was threatened by a “genetic deterioration of the human race” and the
attention he received from a U.S. News & World Report interview a month later further fueled his desire for
verbal combat.  His views became increasingly controversial, as he asserted that darker races were mentally
inferior to whites and that ghetto blacks were “downbreeding” humanity.  He became a firm proponent of
eugenics --- the belief that targeted breeding could lead to improvements in the human race.  At age 68, he
even donated to a California sperm bank for geniuses --- not long after calling his two sons and daughter an
evolutionary “regression.”

Controversy and rage followed him everywhere and he welcomed it.   For instance, talking of prejudice
against blacks in 1980, he told Playboy Magazine, “If you found a breed of dog that was unreliable and
temperamental, why shouldn't you regard it in a less favorable light?"  He was the subject of rallies where he
was called the “Hitler of the ‘80s,” his classes and speeches were frequently interrupted by protesters, and
he once debated face to face with Stanford protesters who burned him in effigy.  By 1982, Shockley was
running for the California Republican party Senate nomination on a platform advocating voluntary sterilization
for those with an IQ under 100.  He would finish in 8th place with less than 1% of the vote.

In 1989, Shockley would die in disgrace at the age of 79.  He was all alone except for his second wife,
Emmy, who did not hold funeral services because no one would have attended.   His children learned of his
death by reading the newspaper.  

                                                                                                          -Matt Bowling
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Sources:
Palo Alto Historical Association, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Times,
San Francisco Chronicle, Peninsula Times Tribune, Talk Magazine (May
1953), Palo Altan, Stanford Daily, San Jose Mercury, Mountain View
Voice, Wikipedia,
Broken Genius, The Rise and Fall of William
Shockley
, by Joel Shurkin
William Shockley with fellow Palo
Alto inventor Lee De Forest, who
invented the original radio tube.
A young William Shockley at
the blackboard.
A map of the Professorville area including 959 Waverley Street where William Shockley lived as a boy.  Zoom in
and out with the + and - symbols in the top left corner of the map...
Palo Alto: Then & Now
circa
1958
2008
One of William Shockley's
boyhood homes at 959
Waverley Street.  This
craftsman style house was
built in 1899.
Shockley Transistor in the late 1950s when it served as essentially the first startup of Silicon Valley.  The building is just
over the line in Mountain View at 391 San Antonio Road.  Today the building is abandoned although it served as a fruit
market in recent years.  A sign outside declares its importance, but the Mountain View City Council decided that Shockley
did not deserve to have his name on it.
Shockley seated with
Bardeen and Brattain on
the cover of Electronics
Magazine.
The junction transistor,
Shockley's crowning
achievment.
A plaque in Mountain
View near Shockley's
old business declares
the historic location.
Joel Shurkin, the writer of the
definitive Shockley biography,
Broken Genius.
Shockley's magnum
opus.
The Shockley team toasts their
leader before many would exit
the company.
The reunion of many of the
Shockley Superconductor
team along with Shockley's
second wife Emmy at center.
The former Shockley house on
Waverley.
Shockley in his later years.
William Shockley's diary
mentions, rather briefly, a key
moment in Silicon Valley
history --- the defection  of the
"treacherous eight."
"A former manager of mine, who was an engineer at Bell Labs during the
time Shockley was there, had an interesting point about him
'inventing' the transistor. Bardeen and Brattain invented it, but it
was Bell Labs policy that group managers be named in patents, which is
how Shockley got involved. Helps explain the rift between him and the
other two, and why he had difficulty living up to his reputation."
-Julian
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