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Charles E. Hutchinson

Charles E. Hutchinson

John H. Krehbiel Sr. Professor for Emerging Technologies, Emeritus
Dean, Emeritus

603/646-3802
Charles.Hutchinson@Dartmouth.edu

"I don't ever intend to 'retire' retire. I'm already twice retired—once from U. Mass and now from Thayer School," said Charles Hutchinson ("Hutch," as he is known to the Dartmouth community). After 19 years with the electrical and computer engineering department of the University of Massachusetts, Hutch came to Dartmouth in 1984 at the encouragement of John Strohbehn, a Thayer School professor and classmate of Hutch's at Stanford. "He knew I had not been happy with the confining format of specialization in engineering education. He kept talking about the opportunity to expand Thayer School's interdisciplinary approach." It was a convincing argument, and Hutch came to Thayer School to stay.

Hutch served as dean from 1984 until 1994, and again from 1997 to 1998. While leading the effort to raise $40 million, he oversaw a major facilities renovation in the late 1980s. He also established the Master of Engineering Management (M.E.M.) program, with an innovative curriculum that immerses students in an integrated approach to the engineering design and technology management processes.

From 1998 to 2003, as Dean Emeritus and the John H. Krehbiel Sr. Professor for Emerging Technologies, Hutch directed the M.E.M. program and developed and taught courses in electrical engineering, design, total quality management, and emerging technologies. In 2000, with Associate Professor of Engineering Tillman U. Gerngross, Hutchinson founded the biotechnology company GlycoFi Inc., which quickly became a leader in the field of yeast glycoengineering and optimization of biologic drug molecules. He served as CEO of GlycoFi Inc. until it was acquired by Merck in spring 2006.

Now "retired" for the fourth or fifth time, Hutch is returning once again to teaching and will develop another new course in technology, innovation, and entrepreneurship for Dartmouth engineering students.

Expertise

Entrepreneurship; emerging technologies

Education

  • B.S., Electrical Engineering, Illinois Institute of Technology 1957
  • M.S., Electrical Engineering, Stanford University 1961
  • Ph.D., Electrical Engineering, Stanford University 1963

Teaching, 2007-2009

Entrepreneurial

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