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CHICAGO LIGHTING INSTITUTE

Executive summary

The Chicago Lighting Institute opened on April 11, 1930 as an educational and marketing association for the lighting industry in the Midwest. Supported by five full corporate members and fifty associate corporate members, it sought to acquaint architects, interior designers, electrical engineers, urban planners and the general public with the latest developments and applications in lighting. It was the largest cooperative Institute fostering better lighting practices in the United States and, as such, was the pioneer U.S. institution promoting appropriate use of light in the earlier years of the lighting industry. In 1968, after thirty-eight years of service, the Institute merged with the Chicago Electric Association.

History of locations

In 1929, the fiftieth anniversary of Edison’s invention of the electric light, leaders of the lighting industry in Chicago determined to found a lighting institute to foster the use of better light in homes, educational and service institutions, and industry. Because the lighting industry was no longer in its infancy, it was felt that the time had come to aggressively market the value of using optimum lighting conditions for work, study and leisure. The member companies who provided the financial support recognized that facilities were needed where study and demonstrations could shape the future of a soon-to-be giant industry. Over the course of the Institute’s history, it operated in four different locations, three of which were architecturally significant.

1.	20 N. Wacker Drive, Civic Opera Building (1930-1942). In 1930, the 36th floor of the Civic Opera Building was renovated to realize the objectives of the Institute. The building was designed in 1929 by Graham, Anderson, Probst and White, and owned by Samuel Insull, a business magnate who also formed the Commonwealth Edison Company. The 45-story “skyscraper” had an art deco style and was formed in the shape of a huge armchair facing the Chicago River. It was also home to the Civic Opera, later the Chicago Lyric Opera. Employing 11,000 square feet, the Institute’s facilities on the 36th floor provided a theater/auditorium, a factory room, a lounge, a retail store, an outdoor lighting room, a school room, an office, and a six-room apartment used to display residential lighting affects. In 1942 a court order issued by Federal Judge William H. Holly, using condemnation proceedings, vacated the 36th floor for the use of the U.S. Army. 2.	72 N. Adams Street (1942-1946). During the remaining years of World War II, the Institute relocated to the first floor of the Commonwealth Edison Building. There it occupied 3,800 square feet devoted to exhibits and demonstrations of war-time lighting plus a limited display of fundamental lighting for use by school groups. 3.	37 S. Wabash Avenue (1946-1957) At the close of the war, the Institute’s Board decided to renovate the entire 12th floor of the Champlain Building, a structure that had been built by Holabird and Roche in 1903. The technique that used a skeletal metal frame covered by minimal fireproof masonry leaving room for large horizontal “Chicago windows” allowed the construction to proceed rapidly. In 1938, the original Powers building was renamed the Champlain building. In 1945, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill gave the building a sleek mid-century design at the lower level to accommodate the new tenant, Trans World Airlines. In this same building, Illinois Institute of Technology offered its architecture classes supervised by department head, Mies van der Rohe. He also maintained his private offices in the building where he designed the now world-famous IIT campus. The Institute’s facilities offered a workshop, a photometric lab, a lighting clinic, an auditorium, a classroom, a large reception lobby and display along with several private offices and a conference room. The lobby’s focus was two large etched panels on which were inscribed the biblical passage, “Truly the light is sweet and a pleasant thing it is to behold.” One million visitors had come to the Institute by 1948. The photometric laboratory, formerly at the Illinois Institute of Technology, was moved to the Chicago Lighting Institute. 4.	140 S. Dearborn Street, Marquette Building (1957-1968). In 1957, the Institute relocated to another even more famous 1894 building, again designed by Holabird and Roche. The Institute occupied half of the second floor off the dramatic central rotunda with its Tiffany glass mosaics portraying the travels of Pere Marquette. Its remodeling the second floor offered 8,790 square feet for a theater/auditorium, classroom, industrial room, library, general office spaces, conference room, director’s office, as well as a lobby and display space. The central lobby faced a large etched-glass mural with the biblical passage, “Let there be light.”

Personnel

Ralph G. Raymond was the first Managing Director of the Chicago Lighting Institute, beginning in 1930. He held the position for nine years, resigning in 1938 to become supervisor of sales and promotion for Commonwealth Edison Co., and ultimately, a Division vice president. R. G. Raymond, at the recommendation of E.D.Tillson of Edison’s Lighting Laboratory, hired Carl W. Zersen from the Photometric Laboratory at Commonwealth Edison Company to work part time as a lecturer for the classes conducted by the Chicago Lighting Institute.

In 1930, Zersen became the full-time Associate Director, responsible for directing the lectures, publicity and consulting activities of the Institute. The annual attendance at lectures jumped from 24,000 in 1939 to over 63,000 by 1939, a total of over a half-million persons in ten years. In December, 1938, following the resignation of Ralph Raymond, Zersen became the Managing Director, remaining in this position for the next 38 years. During this time, the Institute became the major proponent of education for better lighting in the United States.

The Institute library maintained lighting journals from the United States, England, Germany, France and Australia. Professionals from many countries regularly visited the Institute as the premier U.S. cooperative educational organization promoting the use of better lighting. By 1968, the year in which Zersen retired, the leaders in the lighting industry no longer felt it necessary to maintain an educational institute to promote optimum lighting conditions because this task had largely been accomplished. Further, architects, electrical engineers and interior designers had received the coursework the Institute was designed to provide from their own educational programs. The world was at a different place in terms of illumination than it had been in 1930, and the industry reconsidered its objectives.

Zersen was succeeded by Robert Turek, a lighting specialist with the Commonwealth Edison Company. The Chicago Lighting Institute merged with the Chicago Electric Association and the emphasis on promoting better lighting gradually disappeared.

Among those who worked at the Chicago Lighting Institute as lighting professionals were Myrtle Fahsbender, Frederick H. Heintz, J.C. Newhouse, Joseph A. Tills, Harold Weibel, Don Ingersen, Kerr Sanders, Raymond Wozniak, Herman Sereika, Jim Burke, Bob Turek, Joseph Hofmann, William Maroney, Tom Koenig, Brian McCann, Myron Feldser and James Berg. In later years, the staff included Janice McGuirk, Edna Wilson, Dolores Kania, Barbara Zablocki and Clarence Perkins. Those serving as Presidents of the Board of Directors over the years included E.W.Lloyd, O.R. Hogue, R.G. Raymond, A.H.Meyer, G.K. Hardacre, D.P. Wood, O.A.Hill, F.H.Heintz, and R.J. Schulte.

To provide context for this history, a similar educational agency should be mentioned. In 1924, the General Electric Company founded the Nela School of Lighting in Nela Park in the world’s largest industrial park at that time, outside Cleveland, Ohio. The Institute’s name was changed in 1933 to the GE Lighting and Electrical Institute. It offers educational and consulting services similar to those that the Chicago Lighting Institute offered. It claims that ½ million visitors have been at the Institute since 1924. Unlike the Chicago Institute that was a cooperative venture of corporations involved with aspects of illumination, the Nela Park Institute is the venture of one corporation. It continues to exist today.

Membership

The five corporate members of the Chicago Lighting Institute were the Commonwealth Edison Company, the Electric Association, the General Electric Company, Sylvania Electric Products, Inc., and Westinghouse Electric Corporation.

The forty-six corporate associate members in 1967 included:

Advance Transformer Company			Line Material Ind.-Div. McGraw-Ed. Alkco Manufacturing Company			Lithonia Lighting Products, Inc. American Concrete Corporation			Lumalite Products American Louver Company				Luminous Ceilings, Inc. Appleton Electric Company			Major Equipment Company, Inc. Benjamin Products – Thomas Industries		Markstone Manufacturing Company Corning Glass Works				Mason and Basedow Company Crouse-Hinds Lighting, Inc. Mitchell Lighting-Div. Compco Co. Curtis-Electro Lighting, Inc. Modern Light and Equipment Co. Day-Brite Lighting-Div. Morris Kurtzon, Inc. Emerson Electric                               Multi-Electric Manufacturing Co. Framburg and Company				Pfaff & Kendall Garcy Lighting					Revere Electric Manufacturing Co. Good Manufacturing Company			Shalda Lighting Products Co. Edwin F. Guth Company				Sinko Manufacturing and Tool Co. Halo Lighting, Inc.				Smithcraft Corporation Holophane Company, Inc. Solar Light Manufacturing Co. House-O-Lite Corporation			Steber Mfg-Div. Pyle-National Co. Hub Electric Company				Steel City Fluorescent Maintenance Co. Jefferson Electric Company			The Superior Electric Co. Joslyn Manufacturing and Supply			Universal Manufacturing Corporation The Kirlin Company				Wheeler Reflector Company Koehler Lighting				Wide Light Lighting Products, Inc. n, J.A. Lighting, Division

The five members of the Board of Directors were executives appointed by the member companies. Six committees-- executive, development, education, membership, property improvements and publicity-- were staffed by associate member companies.

Practices and accomplishments of the Institute

The facilities of the Institute demonstrated the advantages and opportunities in better lighting for students, homemakers, as well as civic and business groups. Courses were offered for engineers, salesmen, architects, and builders. Over the years, the Institute became a popular venue for those seeking to learn about the latest developments in what was at the time a cutting-edge industry. The annual attendance at lectures and presentations approached 75,000 people. Typical groups included University of Illinois and Notre Dame senior architectural students, Chicago Art Institute and Northwestern University classes in interior design, Illinois Society of Architects, Illinois College of Optometry, Illinois Institute of Technology and Milwaukee School of Engineering electrical engineering classes, and many civic groups, high school classes, women’s clubs, and visitors from foreign countries.

The main lecture room was also a laboratory where many approaches to better lighting were demonstrated. The system employed 401 lamps and 152 circuits achieving foot candle levels from ½ to 1000. The ceiling and drapes could be illuminated with primary colors and combinations; the cove lighting system was equipped with fluorescent lamps plus incandescent down lights controlled by dimmers. The total lighting load was 52 kilowatts, or 52 watts per square foot. The classroom and industrial rooms could demonstrate suspended incandescent units and fluorescent, mercury vapor, sodium vapor, and sulfur lamps.

In an era when new practices of lighting were being pioneered, the Institute was on the cutting edge of the potential hoped for by the corporate and associate members. The Institute’s success also meant greater profits for the corporate membership.

In 1930, a desk was lighted with 5 to 7 foot candles of light. In 1968, some 50 to 300 foot candles of light were employed. The Institute envisioned 600-800 foot candles of use, the light under the shade of a tree on a summer day. Pastel tones and light carpeting were also encouraged by the Institute staff to improve the interior visual environment.

In 1940, clinics were held that attracted some 240-250 people per day from 13 states to explore the use of the new light source, the fluorescent tube, which had been introduced at the New York World’s Fair in 1938-39. Fluorescent lighting was promoted as being twice as efficient as incandescent light.

On July 15, 1964, at the Wisconsin Club in Milwaukee, Carl Zersen used research that he had conducted with 100 leaders in industry and at American universities to recommended that the Milwaukee School of Engineering develop an illumination emphasis within the electrical engineering degree. The proposal was accepted and courses were integrated into the MSOE curriculum.

The Institute advocated better street lighting in urban centers and on November 15, 1958, its Managing Director, Carl Zersen, narrated the pageant, “Light Through the Ages,” with full orchestra, actors and soloists, at the conclusion of which President Eisenhower turned on the new State Street fluorescent lighting system that made it the brightest thoroughfare in the world. Four-hundred thousand people were present for the event. The new lights provided four times the illumination of the ones that had been installed 32 years earlier.

In the same year the development and acceptance of higher foot candles approved by the Illuminating Engineering Society made it possible for the industry to promote heat-by-light installations that by the 1970s became common in many downtown Chicago all-electric buildings. By 1965, the Institute was offering numerous courses for architects and contractors on the subject of heating with light and numerous high rise buildings were being constructed that were no longer heated by traditional means.

Many other examples of the Institute’s impact can be seen in its work with supermarkets, churches, funeral homes, schools, hospitals, factories, department stores, and, as always, private homes. Countless thousands could claim that they renovated or restructured an environment with better illumination as a result of a visit to or from the Chicago Lighting Institute.

Courses offered

Every year numerous courses were offered by the Institute, some repeated annually and others developed to address growing concerns or public interest. The courses typically had twelve two-hour sessions. Fifty students were the maximum that could be enrolled in a class. Some educational institutions gave college credit to their students who enrolled and completed the classes. Among the many courses offered were:

Lighting System Maintenance Wiring Design Lighting Fundamentals Advanced Lighting Design Elements of “Heat with Light” Lighting for Residential Interiors Floodlighting Academy of Lighting Arts Industrial Lighting Workshop

Clinics were regularly offered with titles like Lighting Today’s Classroom, Golf Course Lighting, Lighting Design for Stores, Merchandising through Effective Lighting, Lighting the Funeral Home, and many others.

Zersen’s leadership.

Carl W. Zersen led the Chicago Lighting Institute for 38 years, from 1930 to 1968. During his tenure, the Institute developed a national and even international reputation. In these pioneering years that led from an initial emphasis on the use of better lighting to an era of all-electric buildings, Zersen came to be regarded throughout the industry in the United States as “Mr. Light.” Born in 1903 in Arlington Heights, Illinois, the son of Lutheran pastor, the Rev. Frederick Zersen and his wife, Sophie nee Kirchhoff, young Carl grew up in a home using kerosene lamps and reading about Thomas Edison’s development of a longer-lasting filament to produce artificial light. He attended Concordia College, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, as had his father before him. Although the College was a preparatory school for those considering the Lutheran ministry, Zersen chose rather to pursue his education at the Milwaukee School of Engineering. Knowing of his son’s interest, Frederick Zersen wrote in 1919 to Dr. Charles P. Steinmetz, world re-known mathematician and electrical engineer, asking for recommendations for a school for his son. Steinmetz replied on November 28, in a letter now in the MSOE archives, that “the School of Engineering of Milwaukee is a very good school, is indeed the best of its kind of which I know. I therefore believe that your son does not make a mistake in attending it.” After graduating in 1921 with a certificate in Electrical Engineering, Zersen was admitted in 1922 to the Northwestern University’s College of Engineering in Evanston, Illinois.

Professional service

Zersen served as a member and chair of various committees of the Chicago Section of the Illuminating Engineering Society (IES), and as Chairman of the Chicago Section in 1941 and 1942. At the national IES level, he served for three years as Chairman of the National Committee on Lighting Education (1946-48), and Chairman of the Joint Sub-Committee of Lighting Education with the U.S. Public Health Service (1948-49). He chaired the Committee on Lighting Education comprised of professors from Iowa State College, Kansas State College and Georgia School of Technology, along with nine corporate leaders, which authored the Lighting Fundamentals Course (1947, rev. 1955 and 1961), published by the Illuminating Engineering Society that was used for twenty years as a textbook at the Institute and in a variety of educational settings throughout the United States. He served as the Chairman of the Board of Judges for three International Lighting Competitions sponsored by the National Electrical Manufacturer’s Association (1947, 1947, 1952), as well as the Chairman of the Judging Committees for Lighting Competitions sponsored by the Electrical Construction and Maintenance Magazine (1953) and by McGraw-Hill Publications (1957). He was Chairman of the MSOE Industrial Advisory Committee for Illumination Technology for thirteen years and a member of the MSOE Corporation for eleven years. He gave hundreds of lectures to promote the use of better light at professional conferences and club meetings as well as on radio and television. His topics included everything from Lighting the Nocturnal Garden to Merchandising with Light, Trends and Developments in Office Lighting and Lighting Requirements for the Modern Kitchen. For “Light’s Diamond Jubilee” in 1954, Zersen organized 72 speakers to give talks in 247 settings for a total attendance of 19,938 people, all to promote appreciation for the use of better light. In 1959, Zersen was appointed to the United States National Committee of the Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage comprised of lighting experts from around the world.

He held membership in Rotary #1 in Chicago, in the Association Executives Forum of Chicago and in the Chicago Association of Commerce and Industry.

Awards

Zersen received the Distinguished Service Certificate from the National Electrical Manufacturers Association in 1952. In 1953 he became a Fellow of the Illuminating Engineering Society, which he had joined in 1928. He received an honorary Electrical Engineering degree from the Milwaukee School of Engineering on May 10, 1968. In 1971, he received the Distinguished Service Award from the Illuminating Engineering Society.

Works Cited

“Annual Report.” Chicago Lighting Institute. 140 S. Dearborn, St., Chicago, IL 1967. “Chicago Lighting Institute emphasizes education.” Lighting. Vol. 80, No. 8. August 1964. “IES Lighting Fundamentals Course.” New York: Illuminating Engineering Society, 1961. “Zersen retires from CLI post.” Lamp Journal, April, 1968. “Milwaukee School of Engineering News Services,” MSOE, May 24, 1968. “State Street is Brightest Thorofare in the World with New Lighting System.” Chicago Daily Tribune, Vol. CXVII—No. 273, Nov. 14, 1958. Steinmetz, Charles P. Letter to Rev. F. Zersen. Schenectady, N.Y. Nov. 28, 1919. “Questions and Answers on Fluorescent Lighting,” Electric Light and Power, July 1940. Zersen, Carl. “Trends and Developments for Post-War Lighting.” Lighting and Lamps, October, 1944. , “Fluorescent Lighting—the Latest Development.” Real Estate: The Weekly for Owners, Realtors, Architects and Builders. August 30, 1941. , “Trends in Office Lighting.” Chicago Electrical News, Nov. 1944. ,“Resume and Impression.” Third Annual Lighting Exposition and Conference. Illuminating 	Engineering, Vo. XLIV, No. 6, June, 1949. “38 Years of Lighting Achievement.” Midwest Electrical News. March 1968. Werwath, Karl O. President of Milwaukee School of Engineering, NEWSLETTER, MSOE, Vol. 1, No. 2, August 15, 1971.