John V. N. Dorr
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Dr John Van Nostrand Dorr (1872-1962) was an industrial chemist active in early to middle twentieth century. He attended Rutgers University, where he was admitted to the Zeta Psi fraternity, graduating in 1896. He was awarded the Perkin Medal by the Society of Chemical Industry in 1941, and was the benefactor of several major philanthropies, as well as founding his own charity, the Dorr Foundation.
His major contribution in the field of chemical engineering was the development of the Dorr classifier which became a practical method for the separation and chemical treatment of fine solids suspended in liquid. This technology was used in sewage treatment, water purification, de-silting projects and sugar production. He founded the Dorr Company in 1916
In the early 1950s, Dorr postulated that at night and when rain, snow or fog impaired vision, drivers hugged the white lines painted in the middle of highways. Dorr believed this led to numerous accidents and that painting a white line along the outside shoulders of the highways would save lives. Dorr convinced highway engineers in Westchester County, New York, to test his theory along a stretch of highway with curves and gradients. The decrease in accidents was dramatic and a follow-up test in Connecticut had similar results. Dorr then used his own foundation to publicize the demonstration's results.
[edit] External links
- Society of Chemical Industry - list of Perkin Medal recipients by year