Skip to main content

Think Black: A son reflects on his father’s role in the computer revolution

Enlarge Icon
Slideshow Icon1 of 3Clyde W. Ford on his way to start at IBM
Credit: Courtesy of Clyde W. Ford

In the midst of a computer age that has changed the world, or at least given us small screens to stare at for hours a day, make time for a complex origin story.

It starts in 1947. Computers weighed tons and were run with punch cards. The first coders were inventing a profession — there was no school for it.

International Business Machines (IBM) was king. Its driving force was Thomas J. Watson, a man sometimes referred to as “the world's greatest salesman.”

For some reason, Watson personally selected a young man named John Stanley Ford, trained as an accountant, to become IBM’s first black software engineer. Was it a Jackie Robinson-inspired moment? Not so much.

Our guide through this story is Clyde W. Ford, the son of John Stanley Ford. Clyde followed for a time in his father’s footsteps. Later on, through extensive study, he came to fully understand the challenges his father faced, and the dark historical web — the Holocaust, eugenics, apartheid — that accompanied, and in some ways fueled, the dawn of our data-driven times.

Clyde W. Ford is a software engineer, a chiropractor, a psychotherapist and.the author of “Think Black: A Memoir.” He spoke and took questions at Town Hall Seattle on September 22. KUOW’s Sonya Harris recorded his talk.

Why you can trust KUOW
Close
On Air Shows

Print

Print

Play Audio
 Live Now On KUOW
KUOW Live Stream
On Air Shows

Print

Print

Play Audio
Local Newscast
The Latest
View All
    Play Audio