Hugh H. Skilling


Hugh Hildreth Skilling was a Stanford University professor and a prolific author of electrical engineering textbooks.
Hugh Skilling was born on September 2, 1905, in San Diego, California to William Thompson Skilling and Bird Hildreth Skilling. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in mechanical engineering in 1926 and an engineers degree in electrical engineering in 1927, both from Stanford University. From 1927 to 1929, he was employed in the construction department of the Southern California Edison Company, working onsite at the Big Creek Hydroelectric Project. He joined the Stanford faculty from 1928 to 1929, and then took a break to continue his graduate studies at MIT where he earned a Master of Science degree in 1930. He returned to his Stanford faculty position in 1931 and also earned a Ph.D. from Stanford in the same year. Hugh married Hazel Dillon on June 21, 1932. He continued as a Stanford University professor in electrical engineering until he retired in 1971. During that time, he was head of the department from 1944 to 1967.

Books and Other Publications

Hugh Skilling wrote several research articles early in his career, including papers on electrical analogs of mechanical properties, mechanical analogs of electrical properties, long-distance power transmission, and the electrical breakdown of air through coronal discharge. However, his primary publications were numerous textbooks and other books about electrical engineering and/or teaching.
  • Transient Electric Currents
  • Fundamentals of Electric Waves
  • Exploring Electricity: Man's Unfinished Quest
  • Electric Transmission Lines: Distributed Constants, Theory and Applications
  • Electrical Engineering Circuits
  • A First Course in Electromechanics
  • Electromechanics: A First Course in Electromechanical Energy Conversion
  • Do You Teach? Views on College Teaching
  • Electric Networks
  • Teaching Engineering, Science, Mathematics: Guidance by Distinguished Teachers

Recognition