Elliott Cresson Medal
Elliott Cresson Medal given to Emile Berliner in 1913
CountryUSA
Presented byFranklin Institute
First awarded1875
Last awarded1997

The Elliott Cresson Medal, also known as the Elliott Cresson Gold Medal, was the highest award given by the Franklin Institute. The award was established by Elliott Cresson, life member of the Franklin Institute, with $1,000 granted in 1848.[1] The endowed award was to be "for some discovery in the Arts and Sciences, or for the invention or improvement of some useful machine, or for some new process or combination of materials in manufactures, or for ingenuity skill or perfection in workmanship."[1] The medal was first awarded in 1875, 21 years after Cresson's death.[1]

The Franklin Institute continued awarding the medal on an occasional basis until 1998 when they reorganized their endowed awards under one umbrella, The Benjamin Franklin Awards.[2] A total of 268 Elliott Cresson Medals were given out during the award's lifetime.[3]

{ | class="sortable wikitable" |- ! style="background:#ccf; width=9%" | Year ! style="background:#ccf; width=38%" | Awardee ! style="background:#ccf; width=12%" | Category ! style="background:#ccf; width=41%" | Citation

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1875
| William Gibson A. Bonwill | Life Science | Electro Magnetic Dental Mallet |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1875
| Fiss, Banes, Erben & Co. | Engineering | Worsted Yarns |- |- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1875
| Powers & Weightman | Engineering | Drug Manufacturing |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1875
| William P. Tatham | Invention | Printing press |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1875
| Benjamin Chew Tilghman | Engineering | Sand Blast |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1875
| Joseph Zentmayer | Engineering | Microscopes and Objectives |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1877
| John Charlton | Engineering | Shaft Coupling |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1877
| P. H. Dudley | Engineering | Dynomagraph |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1878
| Henry Bower | Chemistry | Inodorous Glycerin |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1878
| Cyrus Chambers, Jr. | Engineering | Bolt and rivet clipper |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1878
| Williams Farr Goodwin | Engineering | Competitive test of mowing machines |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1879
| Norbert Delandtsheer | Invention | Machine for Testing Flax |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1880
| Louis H. Spellier | Invention | Time Telegraph |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1881
| W. Woodnut Griscom | Engineering | Electric Induction Motor and Battery |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1885
| Cyprien Chabot | Engineering | Shoe Sewing Machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1885
| Frederick Siemens | Engineering | Regenerative Gas Burner |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1886
| Patrick Bernard Delany | Engineering | Synchronous Telegraphy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1886
| Thaddeus S. C. Lowe | Engineering | Water Gas Process and Apparatus |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1886
| Ott & Brewer | Engineering | China and Porcelain Wares |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1886
| Pratt & Whitney Co. | Engineering | System of Interchangeable Cut Gears |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1886
| Robert H. Ramsay | Engineering | Railway Car Transfer Apparatus |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1886
| Liberty Walkup | Invention | Airbrush |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1887
| Charles F. Albert | Engineering | Violins and Bows |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1887
| Hugo Bilgram | Engineering | Bevel Gear Cutter |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1887
| Alfred H. Cowles | Engineering | Electric Smelting Furnace |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1887
| Eugene H. Cowles | Engineering | Electric Smelting Furnace |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1887
| Thomas Shaw | Engineering | Testing for Mine Gases and system of Mine Signaling |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1889
| Edward Alfred Cowper | Invention | Writing Telegraph |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1889
| Ottmar Mergenthaler | Engineering | Linotype machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1889
| T. Hart Robertson | Invention | Writing Telegraph |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1889
| George Frederick Simonds | Engineering | Universal Rolling Machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1890
| James B. Hammond | Engineering | Typewriter Improvements |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1890
| Herman Hollerith | Computer and Cognitive Science | Electric Tabulating Device |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1890
| Mayer Hayes & Co. | Engineering | Manufacture of files |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1891
| Stockton Bates | Engineering | Spindle Support |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1891
| James H. Bevington | Engineering | Welding Metal and Spinning and Shaping Tube |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1891
| Bradley Allen Fiske | Engineering | Rangefinder |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1891
| Tinius Olsen | Engineering | Testing Machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1891
| Edwin F. Shaw | Engineering | Spindle Support |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1891
| Samuel M. Vauclain | Engineering | Compound Locomotive |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1891
| George M. Von Culin | Engineering | Spindle Support |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1892
| Philip H. Holmes | Engineering | Composition for Journal Bearings |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1892
| Henry M. Howe | Engineering | Metallurgy of Steel |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1893
| Clifford H. Batchellor | Engineering | Compound Locomotive |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1893
| Frederic Eugene Ives | Engineering | Color photography |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1893
| George E. Marks | Life Science | Improvements in Artificial Limbs |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1893
| Paul von Jankó | Engineering | Jankó piano keyboard |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1894
| Nikola Tesla | Engineering | Alternating Electric Currents of High Frequency |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1895
| Henry M. Howe | Engineering | Experimental Researches on Steel |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1895
| James Peckover | Invention | Stone Sawing Machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1895
| Lester Allan Pelton | Engineering | Water Wheel |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1896
| Patrick Bernard Delany | Engineering | Telegraphy, High speed system |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1896
| Tolbert Lanston | Invention | Monotype Machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1897
| Hamilton Y. Castner | Engineering | Process of electrolytic decomposing of alkaline chlorides |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1897
| Elisha Gray | Engineering | Telautograph |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1897
| Charles Francis Jenkins | Invention | Phantoscope projector |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1897
| Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen | Physics | Discovery of X-rays |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1897
| Joseph Wilckes | Invention | Econometer [4]

|-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1898
| Wilbur Olin Atwater | Engineering | Respiration Calorimeter |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1898
| Thomas Corscaden | Engineering | All-Wrought Steel Belt Pulley |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1898
| Clemens Hirschel | Invention | Venturi Meter |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1898
| Henri Moissan | Engineering | Investigations with his electric furnace |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1898
| Edward Bennett Rosa | Engineering | Respiration Calorimeter |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1900
| American Cotton Company | Engineering | Round Lap Bale System |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1900
| Louis Edward Levy | Engineering | Method and apparatus for acid blast etching of metal plates |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1900
| Pencoyd Iron Works | Engineering | Bridge construction |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1900
| United States Geological Survey | Earth Science | Exhibit of the USGS |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1900
| Carl Auer von Welsbach | Chemistry | Discoveries regarding metallic oxides |- |- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1901
| Rudolph Diesel | Engineering | Diesel engine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1901
| John S. Forbes | Chemistry | Process of automatically heating and sterilizing fluids |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1901
| Lewis M. Haupt | Engineering | Reaction Breakwater |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1901
| Mason & Hamlin Company | Engineering | Liszt Pipe Organ |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1901
| A. G. Waterhouse | Engineering | Process of automatically heating and sterilizing fluids |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1902
| Charles Ernest Acker | Engineering | Manufacturing Caustic Alkali and Halogen Gas |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1902
| Fred W. Taylor | Engineering | Process of Treating Tool Steel |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1902
| Maunsel White | Engineering | Process of Treating Tool Steel |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1903
| G. H. Clam | Engineering | Method of eliminating metals from mixtures of metals |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1903
| Joseph L. Ferrell | Engineering | Process of fireproofing wood |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1903
| Wilson Lindsley Gill | Engineering; Computer and Cognitive Science | School City Educational Plan |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1903
| Victor Goldschmidt | Engineering | Theory of Musical Harmony |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1903
| Frank J. Sprague | Engineering | System of Electric Traction |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1904
| James Mapes Dodge | Engineering | System of Storing Coal |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1904
| Wilson Lindsley Gill | Engineering; Computer and Cognitive Science | School City |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1904
| Hans Goldschmidt | Physics | Alumino-Thermics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1904
| Louis E. Levy | Engineering | Machine for preparation of plates for etching |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1904
| L. D. Lovekin | Engineering | Expanding and Flanging Machinery for Tubes |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1904
| Alexander E. Outerbridge, Jr. | Engineering | Molecular Structure of Cast Iron |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1904
| John Clinton Parker | Engineering | Steam Generator |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1905
| Gray National Telautograph Company | Engineering | Telautograph |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1905
| Michael Idvorsky Pupin | Physics | Reducing Attenuation of Electrical Waves |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1906
| American Paper Bottle Company | Engineering | Paper Milk Bottles |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1906
| William Joseph Hammer | (unspecified) | Historic Collection of Incandescent Electric Lamps |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1907
| Baldwin Locomotive Works | Engineering | Contributions to Evolution of American Locomotive |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1907
| John L. Borsch | Physics | A new Bi-Focal Lens |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1907
| J. Allen Heany | Engineering | Fireproof Insulated Wire |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1907
| Ferdinand Philips | Engineering | Pressed Steel Pulley for Power Transmission |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1907
| Edward R. Taylor | Chemistry | Electric Furnace Manufacture of Carbon bisulfide |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1908
| Romeyn Beck Hough | Engineering | Uses of American Woods |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1908
| Anatole Mallet | Engineering | Improved Articulated Compound Locomotive |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Marie Curie | Chemistry | The discovery of radium |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Pierre Curie | Chemistry | The discovery of radium |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Wolfgang Gaede | Engineering | Molecular Air Pump |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| James Gayley | Engineering | Dry air blast in blast furnace operation |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Auguste and Louis Lumière | Engineering | Color photography |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| George Owen Squier | Engineering | Multiplex Telephony |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Benjamin Talbot | Engineering | Open Hearth Steel Process |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Walter Victor Turner | Engineering | Air Brake Design and Application |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Underwood Typewriter Co. | Engineering | Underwood Typewriter |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| Alexis Vernasz | Engineering | Milling files |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1909
| H. A. Wise Wood | Engineering | The Autoplate Machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| Automatic Electric Company | Engineering | Automatic System of Telephony |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| John A. Brashear | Physics | Distinguished work in astronomical instruments |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| Peter Cooper Hewitt | Invention | Mercury rectifier |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| John Fritz | Engineering | Distinguished work in iron and steel industries |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| Robert Abbott Hadfield | Engineering | Distinguished work in metallurgical sciences |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| Ernest Rutherford | Engineering | Distinguished work in electrical theory |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| Joseph John Thomson | Physics | For distinguished work in physical sciences |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| Edward Weston | Engineering | Distinguished work in electrical discovery |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1910
| Harvey W. Wiley | Life Science | Distinguished work in agricultural chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Alexander Graham Bell | Engineering | Electrical Transmission of Articulate Speech |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| William Crookes | Chemistry | Discoveries in Chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Alfred E Noble | Engineering | Distinguished work in civil engineering |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Edward Williams Morley | Chemistry | Determination of fundamental magnitudes in chemistry |-


|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Albert A. Michelson | Physics | Investigations in physical optics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe | Chemistry | Important Research in Chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Samuel Wesley Stratton | Engineering | Distinguished work in metrology |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Elihu Thomson | Engineering | Industrial applications of electricity |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1912
| Adolf von Baeyer | Chemistry | Extended research in organic chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1913
| Emile Berliner | Engineering | Contributions to telephony and science of sound reproduction |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1913
| Hermann Emil Fischer | Life Science | Organic and biological chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1913
| Sir William Ramsay | Chemistry | Discoveries in chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1913
| Isham Randolph | Engineering | Distinguished work in civil engineering |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1913
| John Strutt | Physics | Extended researches in physical science |- |- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1913
| Albert Sauveur | Engineering | Metallography of Iron and Steel |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1913
| Charles Proteus Steinmetz | Engineering | Analytical methods in electrical engineering |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1914
| Josef Maria von Eder | Chemistry | Original Researches in Photo-Chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1914
| Carl Paul Gottfried von Linde | Engineering | Liquefaction of gases and refrigeration |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1914
| Edgar Fahs Smith | Chemistry | Leading work in electro-chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1914
| Orville Wright | Engineering | The art and science of aviation |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1915
| Michael J. Owens | Engineering | Automatic Bottle Blowing Machine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1916
| American Telephone & Telegraph | Engineering | Development of the Art of telephony |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1916
| Byron E. Eldred | Engineering | Low Expansion Wire for Incandescent Lamps |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1916
| Robert Gans | Engineering | Permutit water softening process |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1917
| Edwin Fitch Northrup | Engineering | Investigation of Electric Furnaces and High Temperature |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1918
| Isaac Newton Lewis | Engineering | Lewis Machine Gun |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1920
| William LeRoy Emmet | Engineering | Electrical Propulsion of Ships |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1923
| Lee DeForest | Engineering | Audion |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1923
| Raymond D. Johnson | Engineering | Hydraulic Valve |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1923
| Albert Kingsbury | Engineering | Thrust bearing |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1925
| Francis Hodgkinson | Engineering | Turbo-Electric Appliances |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1926
| George Ellery Hale | Physics | Astronomical Researches of sun, solar atmosphere and solar physics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1926
| Charles S. Hastings | Engineering | Design of Optical Systems |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1927
| Dayton C. Miller | Physics | Researches in Sound |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1927
| Edward Leamington Nichols | Physics | Investigations in the Physical Sciences |-


|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1928
| Gustaf W. Elmen | Engineering | Permalloy |- |- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1928
| Henry Ford | Engineering | Revolutionizing automobile industry, and industrial leadership |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1928
| Vladimir Karapetoff | Computer and Cognitive Science | Kinematic Computing Devices |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1928
| Charles L. Lawrance | Engineering | Wright Whirlwind Air-Cooled Engine, Model J-5 |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1929
| James Colquhoun Irvine | Life Science | Carbohydrate chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1929
| Chevalier Jackson | Life Science | Instruments for Removal of Foreign Bodies from Respiratory and food Passages |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1929
| Elmer Ambrose Sperry [5] | Engineering | Navigational and Recording Instruments (Gyroscopic) |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1930
| Norman Rothwell Gibson | Physics | Measurement of Liquid Flow in Closed Conduits |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1930
| Irving Edwin Moultrop | Engineering | High Pressure Steam Boilers in Electric Generating Stations |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1931
| Clinton Joseph Davisson | Physics | Scattering and diffraction of electrons by crystals |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1931
| Lester Halbert Germer | Physics | Scattering and Diffraction of Electrons by Crystals |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1931
| Kotaro Honda | Engineering | Contributions to magnetism and metallurgy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1931
| Theodore Lyman | Physics | Work in Spectroscopy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1932
| Percy W. Bridgman | Physics | Work in high pressure |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1932
| Charles LeGeyt Fortescue | Engineering | Symmetrical Coordinates in Polyphase Networks |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1932
| John B. Whitehead | (unspecified) | Dielectric Behavior |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1933
| Walther Bauersfeld | Physics | Optical Planetarium |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1933
| Juan de la Cierva | Engineering | Autogiro-flying machine with freely rotating wings |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1934
| Stuart Ballantine | Engineering | Vertical Antenna for Radio Transmission |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1934
| Union Switch & Signal | Engineering | Continuous Cab Signal and Automatic Train Control Systems |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1936
| George O. Curme | Chemistry | Development of synthetic aliphatic chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1936
| Robert J. Van de Graaff | Engineering | High Voltage Electrostatic Generator |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1937
| Carl David Anderson | Chemistry | Discovery of the positron |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1937
| William Bowie | Earth Science | Contributions to the Science of Geodesy (Isostasy) |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1937
| Jacques Edwin Brandenberger | Engineering | Process for Manufacture of Cellophane |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1937
| William F. Giauque | Physics | Low temperature research |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1937
| Ernest O. Lawrence | Engineering | Development of the Cyclotron |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1938
| Edwin H. Land | Engineering | Polaroid camera |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1939
| Charles Vernon Boys | Physics | Creation of new methods for measuring gravitation, sound, heat, radiation and current and static electricity |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1939
| George Ashley Campbell | Engineering | Theory of electric circuits for improvements in telephony |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1939
| John R. Carson | Engineering | Contributions to electric communications |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1940
| Frederick M. Backet | Engineering | Low carbon ferro-alloys and electro-metallurgy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1940
| Robert R. Williams | Life Science | Researches upon Vitamin B1 including its isolation in the pure state in quantities sufficient for further study |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1941
| United States Navy | Engineering | Submarine rescue devices, U.S. lung and rescue chamber |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1942
| Claude Silbert Hudson | Life Science | Investigation in Carbohydrate chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1942
| Isidor I. Rabi | Physics | Measurement of magnetic moments of atomic nuclei, and their radio frequency spectra |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1943
| Charles Metcalf Allen | Engineering | Salt velocity method for measuring the flow of water in conduits |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1944
| Roger Adams | Chemistry | Contributions in organic chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1945
| Stanford Caldwell Hooper | Engineering | Leadership in field of radio for U.S. Navy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1945
| Lewis Ferry Moody | Engineering | Hydraulic turbines |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1946
| Gladeon M. Barnes | Engineering | Contributions to design and development of anti-aircraft guns, tanks, seacoast artillery and welded gun carriages |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1948
| Edwin H. Colpitts | Engineering | Practical systems of long distance communications |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1950
| Basil Ferdinand Jamieson Schonland | Physics | Work in the field of atmospheric electricity and the mechanism of lightning discharge |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1952
| Edward C. Molina | Engineering | Contributions to improvement of telephonic communications by applying mathematical probability to the study of telephone traffic and by the invention of switching equipment |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1952
| H. Birchard Taylor | Engineering | Development of the single runner vertical reaction turbine |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1953
| William Blum | Physics | Scientific basis for the electro-deposition of metals |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1953
| George Russell Harrison | Physics | Precision measurement in Zeeman effect |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1953
| William F. Meggers | Physics | Contributions to field of spectroscopy and to the knowledge of the electronic structure of many elements |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1955
| F. Philip Bowden | Physics | For extensive investigations involving frictions between solid surfaces |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1957
| Willard F. Libby | Physics | Technique of radio carbon dating |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1957
| Reginald James Seymour Pigott | Engineering | Engineering accomplishments, inventions and leadership |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1957
| Robert Alexander Watson-Watt | Engineering | Pulsed radar, and development of radar systems |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1958
| Joseph C. Patrick | Chemistry | Discoveries in polysulfide polymers and new processes of combining chemical compounds for the manufacture of synthetic rubber |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1958
| Stephen P. Timoshenko | Engineering | Theory of elasticity and elastic stability |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1959
| John Hays Hammond | Engineering | Developed remote radio control of moving vehicles |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1959
| Henry Charles Harrison | Engineering | Matched impedance principle in electro-mechanical devices |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1959
| Irving Wolff | Engineering | Contributions to radio, radar and electronics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1960
| Hugh Latimer Dryden | Engineering | Contributions to theory and application of aerodynamics which advanced the art of wind tunnel and aircraft design and for contributions to design and development of first automatic radar homing guided missile |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1960
| Arpad Ludwig Nadai | Engineering | Pioneering work in elasticity of materials |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1960
| William Francis Gray Swann | Physics | Significant studies in the field of cosmic radiation |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1961
| Donald A. Glaser | Physics | The bubble chamber for tracking and photographing tracks of high energy ionizing particles and the fragments of nuclear collisions |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1961
| Rudolf L. Mössbauer | Physics | Discovery of recoilless emission |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1961
| Reinhold Rudenberg | Engineering | Performance of electric power systems |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1961
| James Alfred Van Allen | Physics | Pioneering achievements in space science, Van Allen Radiation Belts |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1962
| James G. Baker | Physics | Innovations in the design of astronomical instruments and the mathematics of optical design |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1962
| Wernher von Braun | Engineering | Liquid rocket motors and rocket development |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1963
| Nicholas Christofilos | Physics | Contributions to applied electromagnetism and nuclear physics such as conception of strange-focusing principle in synchrotrons, the ARGUS experiment and principles in Astron development |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1963
| Grote Reber | Physics | Radio astronomy, early radio telescopes, and the identification of the first radio star |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1964
| Waldo L. Semon | Engineering | Achievements in natural and synthetic rubber production |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1964
| Richard V. Southwell | Physics | Solution of buckling problems in physics and engineering |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1964
| Robert Rathbun Wilson | Physics | Contributions to the control and direction of high-energy particle beams and as a designer of instrumentation for measurement of high-energy physical phenomena |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1965
| Donald Dexter Van Slyke | Life Science | Clinical chemistry procedures and apparatus |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1966
| Everitt P. Blizard | Physics | Development of the theory of radiation shielding |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1966
| Herman Francis Mark | Chemistry | Polymers |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1968
| Neil Bartlett | Chemistry | Fluorine Compounds of Xenon and Radon |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1969
| Henry Eyring | Chemistry | Quantum mechanical calculations of activation energies |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1969
| Peter Carl Goldmark | Engineering | Contributions in the fields of electronics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1970
| Walter Henry Zinn | Engineering | Nuclear power reactors |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1971
| Paul J. Flory | Chemistry | Polymer science |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1971
| John Hasbrouck Van Vleck | Physics | Theories of magnetism and dielectrics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1972
| Brian D. Josephson | Physics | Josephson effect and theory of matter at low temperatures |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1972
| William Powell Lear | Engineering | Development of full maneuvering automatic pilot and Lear jet |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1973
| Allan R. Sandage | Physics | Astronomy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1973
| John Paul Stapp | Life Science | Crash Injury Research |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1974
| Theodore L. Cairns | Chemistry | Percyano compounds, synthesis and exploration of chemical and physical properties |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1974
| Robert H. Dicke | Physics | Role in gravitational experiment and theory |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1974
| Arie Jan Haagen-Smit | Earth Science | Plant hormones and air pollution chemistry |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1974
| Bruno B. Rossi | Physics | Cosmic rays, gamma-ray astronomy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1975
| Mildred Cohn | Life Science | Nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of enzymatic complexes |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1975
| Michael James Lighthill | Physics | Acoustic quadrupole theory of aerodynamic noise generation |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1976
| Leon Lederman | Physics | Leadership in forefront of experimentation in study of high energy interactions, nuclear forces and particle physics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1978
| Herbert C. Brown | Chemistry | Development of methods for synthesis of diborane and alkali metal hydrides |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1978
| Frank H. Stillinger | Chemistry | Computer-generated model for water molecules |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1979
| Steven Weinberg | Physics | Unified theory of weak and electromagnetic interactions |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1980
| Riccardo Giacconi | Physics | Outstanding work in X-ray astronomy |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1981
| Marion King Hubbert | Earth Science | Application of quantitative methods to geological problems |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1982
| Harold P. Eubank | Physics | Plasma physics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1982
| Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr. | Physics | Contributions to the understanding of molecular structure and dynamics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1984
| Elizabeth F. Neufeld | Life Science | For investigation of genetics of mucopolysaccharide storage disease |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1985
| Robert N. Clayton | Engineering | For the application of mass spectrometry to geoscience research |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1985
| Andrei Sakharov | Physics | For contributions to controlled thermonuclear reactions, baryon synthesis and proton decay, induced gravity and the quark model |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1986
| Leo P. Kadanoff | Physics | For contributions to the current understanding of second order phase transition |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1987
| Gerd Binnig | Physics | For development of the scanning tunneling microscope |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1987
| Heinrich Rohrer | Physics | For the development of scanning tunneling microscope |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1988
| Harry G. Drickamer | Engineering | For clarification of the role of pressure in producing paramagnetic-ferromagnetic and conductor-insulator transitions |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1989
| Edward Norton Lorenz | Physics | For interpretation of dynamical chaos in physical systems |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1990
| Marlan O. Scully | Physics | For his discoveries in laser physics and quantum optics, atomic and statistical physics, and biological engineering |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1991
| Yakir Aharonov | Physics | For observations of electromagnetic potentials and insights into quantum mechanics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1991
| David Bohm | Physics | For elevated electromagnetic potentials to status of physical observables |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1992
| Lap-Chee Tsui | Life Science | For the discovery of the cystic fibrosis gene |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1995
| Marvin H. Caruthers | Life Science | For his contributions in automating the synthesis of DNA oligonucleotides |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1995
| Alfred Y. Cho | Physics | For development and refinement of techniques of molecular beam epitaxy for use in quantum physics |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1997
| Irwin Fridovich | Life Science | For discovering the biology of free radical reactions in living organisms |-

|- style="background:#fffff6" | align="center" | 1997
| Joe Milton McCord | Life Science | For discovering the biology of free radical reactions in living organisms |-

|

References

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  1. ^ a b c The Franklin Institute. Donors of the Medals and their histories. The Elliott Cresson Medal - Founded in 1848 - Gold Medal.[dead link] Retrieved on July 13, 2009.
  2. ^ The Franklin Institute. Awards. About the Awards: History and Facts, Retrieved on July 13, 2009.
  3. ^ The Franklin Institute. Winners. Cresson Medal winners.[dead link] Note that the 269 listed awardees include two different entries for Lee DeForest, with different spellings of his name. DeForest received only one medal, in 1923. Retrieved on July 13, 2009.
  4. ^ Franklin Institute. Journal of the Franklin Institute, Pergamon Press, 1898, page 210. "The Econometer: A Gas Balance for Indicating Continuously the Proportion of Carbonic Acid Gas in the Flow of Furnace Gases"
  5. ^ "Elmer Sperry Dies. Famous Inventor". New York Times. June 17, 1930. Retrieved 2012-12-21. In 1914, he was awarded first prize of the Aero Club of France or his airplane stabilizer; he also was the winner of two Franklin Institute Medals in 1914 and 1929; Collier Trophies, 1915, 1916; Holley Medal, 1927; John Fritz Medal, 1927; Albert Gary Medal, 1929; two decorations from the last Czar of Russia; two decorations from the Emperor of Japan, the Order of the Rising Sun and the Order of the Sacred Treasure; and the grand prize of the Panama Exposition. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)