Georgia Tech President Blake Van Leer oversees creation of a Department of Industrial Engineering housing 15 students and three professors working in two borrowed rooms in the Swann Building.
Frank Groseclose, who will later become known as the “father of industrial engineering” at Georgia Tech, becomes the first professor.
The Georgia School of Technology is renamed to the Georgia Institute of Technology, and the department becomes the School of Industrial Engineering.
The School establishes a chapter of the Institute of Industrial Engineers, and awards its first Master in Industrial Engineering.
The School creates the ISyE Alumni Advisory Board.
The Manufacturing Research Center opens, setting the hallmark for corporate research cooperation.
William B. Rouse is elected to the National Academy of Engineering.
The School merges several research centers into The Logistics Institute with Don Ratliff as the executive director, Edward Frazelle, Ph.D. IE 1989, directing the professional education activities, and George Nemhauser directing the research activities. The graduate program obtains a No. 1 ranking again by U.S. News & World Report and begins an impressive consecutive run of years in the top spot.
Leon McGinnis founds the Keck Virtual Factory Laboratory to develop detailed models to support system design and operation in the manufacturing domain.
Donald Ratliff is elected to the National Academy of Engineering.
H. Milton Stewart, Jr., IE 1961, and Carolyn J. Stewart, Honorary Alumnae 2008, establish the H. Milton and Carolyn J. Stewart School Chair as Georgia Tech’s first endowed School Chair.
Georgia Tech adopts the semester system.
An 18-month Master of Science in International Logistics (known as the Executive Master in International Logistics & Supply Chain Strategy program) is established. The School collaborates with the National University of Singapore to open The Logistics Institute-Asia Pacific for research and education programs in global logistics.
Through the generosity of H. Milton Stewart, Jr., IE 1961, and family, the School becomes endowed as the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering.
The Logistics Institute is renamed the Supply Chain & Logistics Institute.
Pinar Keskinocak, Julie Swann, and Ozlem Ergun found the Center for Health and Humanitarian Systems to improve the human condition and promote wellness through the development of tools and collaborations that transform decision making and enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of health and humanitarian systems.
Jane Chumley Ammons is named the H. Milton and Carolyn J. Stewart School Chair, making her the seventh school chair. She is the first female to be named chair in the College of Engineering.
ISyE establishes a one-year Master of Science in Supply Chain Engineering.
William J. Cook is elected to the National Academy of Engineering.
H. Edwin Romeijn is named the H. Milton and Carolyn J. Stewart School Chair, making him the eighth school chair.
George Nemhauser, A. Russell Chandler III Chair and Institute Professor, is awarded the prestigious Georgia Tech Class of 1934 Distinguished Professor Award. He gave the Georgia Tech graduate commencement address in fall 2015.
The Supply Chain and Logistics Institute and Center for Health and Humanitarian Systems become Interdisciplinary Research Centers.
Alexander Shapiro is elected to the National Academy of Engineering.
Arkadi Nemirovski is elected to the National Academy of Sciences.
Jeff Wu, Coca-Cola Chair in Engineering Statistics, receives the Georgia Tech Class of 1934 Distinguished Professor Award.