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The Rich History of Research & Development in New Jersey
Despite Sopranos references and "What's your exit?" jokes, New Jersey is a small state with
some very big advantages. Once called "America the beautiful, only smaller" by National
Geographic, New Jersey boasts 127 miles of white sandy beaches, over one million acres of
protected Pinelands, thousands of lakes, rivers and streams, miles of scenic valleys and
mountains and four national wildlife preserves - more than any other Eastern state. It is a
state rich in history, culture, entertainment and industry.
Businesses have always flocked to the Garden State for its central location, highly educated
work force, reliable mass transportation system and close proximity to the financial and media
resources of New York City. Some of the state's fastest growing industries - pharmaceuticals/
biotechnology, information technology, chemical and electronics - are those driven by research
and development to create the new, the improved and the innovative.
"Beginning with Thomas Alva Edison, New Jersey has more inventors per square mile than any
other state in the nation," says Mario Casabona, past Chairman of the Research & Development
Council of New Jersey. In fact, New Jersey ranks fourth in total U.S. patents and has produced
30 Nobel Prize winners. "We also have the highest concentration of scientists," he notes. "As past
Chairman of an association that supports and promotes research and development in New Jersey,
I'm proud of New Jersey's achievements and of our well-deserved reputation as The Innovation
State."
The Medicine Chest of the World: New Jersey's Pharmaceutical Companies
New Jersey ranks first in the nation in the manufacturing of pharmaceuticals. In 2001 alone,
nearly $2.4 billion was spent here for research and development of new pharmaceuticals and
medical technology and in recent years, nearly 40% of all new drugs approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration were created by New Jersey firms and associates. Fifteen of the
largest drug companies in the world have established facilities in New Jersey, making the
pharmaceutical industry the state's biggest employer.
With this rich pharmaceutical presence, it is no wonder that many important medical
discoveries originated right here. The anti-cancer drug, Interferon, anti-anxiety drugs such
as Valium and Librium, the world's first test for Hepatitis C, antibiotics like streptomycin,
Band-aid sterile bandages, Retin-A acne and wrinkle cream, Colgate's Total antibacterial
toothpaste and most recently, Listerine PocketPak strips, to name just a few.
High Tech Innovations
In addition to pharmaceuticals, electronics and technology are also big business in New Jersey.
The state is home to 476 electronics manufacturing facilities and ranks first in the research
and development of electronics innovations overall. Some of the milestone "firsts" in
electronics and products that now drive the American way of life had their origin right here.
The television and the electronics that made cable television possible, the photo-copier, the
flight simulator, the weather satellite, FM radio, and the first transistor -- a part of almost
every electronic device and led to the invention of the silicon gate transistor, the power
behind today's computers, all came about through the ingenuity of New Jersey inventors.
In fact, one in ten New Jersey residents who work in the private sector, is employed by a high
technology firm. Beginning with Oberlin Smith, a contemporary of Thomas Alva Edison's, who
back in 1877 developed a reel-to-reel magnetic recording system -- the technology that paved
the way for the development of the tape recorder, the telephone answering machine and the
computer -- New Jersey has proven a leader in the high-tech field. Some of our high tech
innovations include: the high speed modem; digital cellular technology; cell phones and the
batteries that power them; the laser; the laser bar code scanner; the fax machine; the
semi-conductor; DSL for high speed Internet access; and the silicon germanium thermoelectric
power generator that made the Voyager Space Probe possible. And then, of course, there's a
little invention called "the incandescent lamp" more commonly known as the electric light.
The Greatest Inventor: A Famous New Jerseyan
Thomas Alva Edison, the genius who harnessed the power of electricity, made New Jersey his
home and his workplace for over 40 years. Edison was granted 1,093 patents during his lifetime,
more than any other inventor. In addition to the electric light and the system by which it is
generated, Edison invented the dry storage battery, the electric railway, the wireless
transmission of messages, the motion picture camera and, his favorite -- the phonograph.
"Edison didn't just invent machines: he invented entire industries," notes Casabona. "But
perhaps the greatest invention Edison left us is the first industrial research and development
laboratory: The concept of research and development as an organized process with scientific
apparatus, trained assistants, and plenty of patience, imagination, creativity and hard work.
This was the truly the beginning of research and development. And we can proudly say it all
started in New Jersey."
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New Jersey's Earliest Research and Development Laboratories and their Innovations
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| Innovation |
Company Lab |
Lab Opens |
| Incandescent Lamp |
Edison's Menlo Park Lab |
1876 |
| Electric Power Systems |
General Electric |
1885 |
| The Phonograph |
Edison's West Orange Lab |
1887 |
| Antiseptic Surgical Dressing |
Johnson & Johnson |
1891 |
| Recombivax HB, the first genetically engineered vaccine for human use |
Merck |
1891 |
| Specialty chemicals used in adhesives, resins and starches |
National Starch |
1895 |
| Teflon and Lycra |
Dupont |
1903 |
| Solvent-free, low odor, low VOC, Water-thinnable paint |
Benjamin Moore |
1904 |
| Mass produced lightbulbs |
Westinghouse |
1904 |
| Motor oil, low-lead and lead-free gasoline |
Exxon |
1919 |
| Emission control and fuel efficiency technology |
Engelhard |
1920 |
| Television |
RCA |
1920 |
| The transistor, the laser and fiber optics |
Bell Labs |
1925 |
| High octane gasoline |
Mobil |
1925 |
| The "hot wire" welding process |
Union Carbide |
1925 |
| High voltage transmission systems & substations |
PSE&G |
1926 |
| Valium |
Hoffman LaRoche |
1929 |
| Condensed Soup |
Campbell Soup |
1939 |
| High strength SPECTRA polyethylene fiber for bulletproof vests, surgical gloves, sports equipment, artificial tendons and ligaments and joint prostheses |
Allied Signal |
1943 |
| The Ritz cracker |
Nabisco |
1958 |
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