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Byron Wright Obituary

October 19, 1917 - April 9, 2015 Longtime UCLA Physics Professor Byron Terry Wright died peacefully, surrounded by family, at the home of his daughter in Los Angeles on the evening of April 9th, 2015 at the age of 97. He was born to Wilbur and Dora Thompson Wright on October 19, 1917 in Waco Texas and attended Rice University where as a physics undergraduate, the results of his experiment were published as a Letter to the Editor in the Physical Review. From 1938 to 1941 he worked at the Radiation Laboratory under Earnest Lawrence while he obtained his PhD at the University of California at Berkeley. In 1941 he was part of a group involved in antisubmarine research at the naval facility in Point Loma, California and his work on an underwater camera led to an unexpected visit to Pearl Harbor on December 24-25th in an unsuccessful attempt to survey the harbor entrance sea floor. In 1942 he was one of many physicists invited to Berkeley to work on a project to determine the feasibility of using a mass spectrometer to produce enriched uranium for an atomic bomb. During the next three years he traveled between Berkeley, Oak Ridge and Los Alamos working on various aspects of what became known as the Manhattan Project. During this period he met and married the love of his life, Lorna Doone Bloemers on October 21, 1944. In 1946, the family, which now included his first daughter Carol, moved from Berkeley along with the Berkeley cyclotron to UCLA where he began his long career as a Physics professor. During the following years, two more daughters, Susan and Gail, joined the family as he rose to the position of full professor by 1956. During his career he was a Fulbright resident scholar (56-57), a Guggenheim Fellow (63-64), and a Ford Foundation Fellow at CERN (63-64). One of his achievements was to initiate construction of equipment in 1949 for a new upper division modern physics lab which is still in use today. His beloved wife of 20 years, Lorna, died on October 21, 1964. After 1972 he became an Associate Dean of the Graduate Division at UCLA where he remained until retiring. Family, travel, and outdoor pursuits (and frequently altogether) filled a big part of his life thereafter. He was a rare person who could simultaneously command true respect and true affection. In addition to his daughters and their husbands, Carol and Harry Schrauth, Susan and Donald Garrard and Gail and Joel Rosenblum he is survived by his grandchildren David, Brent, Cynthia, Tyler, Morgan, Corey, Aaron, Lorna, Stephanie and Maegan. Additionally, he has seven great-grandchildren: Tasmine, Akayla, Emily, Michael, Cameron, Lucas and Elliot. A private family celebration will be held on May 24th, 2015.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Los Angeles Times from May 8 to May 11, 2015.

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3 Entries

Gail Elizabeth Wright Rosenblum

August 19, 2025

I miss you Dad. Amazing all of your accomplishments and in addition raising me, as a single father, after mom died when I was 4 years old. Dad and I visited 26 national parks in my childhood. What a gift!

Barbara bauer

May 2, 2022

It seems like yesterday! I will always remember the sparkle in his blue eyes and how much he loved his daughters and grandchildren. My continued lifetime condolences.

Barbara Bauer

May 11, 2015

His presence in our home for many many occasions was a joy. His intelligence, charm and grace made a contribution to our
family gatherings for decades. I truly loved listening to him recount his memories of those visits. In his own quiet and modest way he created a legacy with us. He was the father of my best friend Susan and the grandfather of my children's best friends Morgan and Corey. He was, by extension, a loved member of our family. I will always remember the sparkle in his blue eyes and the joy he felt being with those he loved.I am sad that he is no longer in our presence but he will always be remembered.
Love,
Barbara, Joshua and Matthew Bauer

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