Burr-Brown Corporation

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Image:Bbrc3.jpg

In September 2000, Burr-Brown Corporation was acquired by Texas Instruments Incorporated.

The Burr-Brown Corporation was a United States technology company which designed, manufactured, and marketed a broad line of proprietary, standard, high-performance, analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits (ICs) used in electronic signal processing. The Company's products were used in a wide range of applications: industrial process and control, telecommunications, test and measurement, medical and scientific instrumentation, medical imaging, digital audio and video, personal computing and multimedia.

The Company was incorporated in Arizona in 1956 and reincorporated in Delaware in 1983. The Company was public with stock trading on NASDAQ under the symbol, BBRC. For 1998, sales and earnings were $258,094,000 and $0.94/share (diluted), respectively.

The Company employed over 1,300 people worldwide with manufacturing and technical facilities located in Tucson, Arizona; Atsugi, Japan; and Livingston, Scotland. Corporate headquarters were located in Tucson, Arizona.

[edit] Monument

When Burr-Brown was acquired by Texas Instruments in 2000, a monument was erected in the main courtyard in Tucson, Arizona with the following text...

From its humble beginnings in Tom Brown’s garage, Burr-Brown Corporation grew into one of the world’s leading designers and manufacturers of high-performance analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits. Robert Page Burr and Thomas R. Brown, Jr., co-founded the company in 1956 and gave their names to the new enterprise.

Mr. Burr left in 1958 to form another company, while Mr. Brown continued to lead Burr-Brown for 44 years. The company developed the first commercial solid-state operational amplifier and led the world in high-precision data conversion technology.

This monument honors Burr-Brown’s founders and their pioneering spirit; its gifted and dedicated employees; and its rich history of technological achievements. In the words of its stated Corporate Purpose, Burr-Brown truly did “provide something of value to mankind.”

On the occasion of becoming one company, this marker is hereby dedicated with deepest respect by Texas Instruments Incorporated to the people of Burr-Brown.

August 30, 2000