David A. Belforte

David A. Belforte obituary, Southbridge, MA

David A. Belforte

David Belforte Obituary

Visit the Belanger-Bullard Funeral Home - Southbridge website to view the full obituary.

STURBRIDGE: David Arthur Belforte (n. Belforti), 90, of Sturbridge, known as: the Laser Pope in Germany, Mister Industrial Laser in Japan, and the Father of Chinese Laser Job Shops, passed away on August 7th, 2023.

He is survived by his wife of 65 years Virgina (Crowley) Belforte; a son Steven D. Belforti of Manchester, NH; a sister Barbara Maguire of Ashland; 2 grandchildren Brent Eric Rust-Belforti, Sarah Jane Rust-Montowski, 2 great grandchildren and 3 great-great grandchildren.

Born in Framingham the son of Arthur D. Belforti and Jean (Purcell), he was raised and educated in that town, graduating in the noted Framingham High School class of 1950 (on the town’s 250th anniversary.) After moving to Ashland, MA, he married Virginia E. (Crowley) and settled in Ashland where a son Steven D. Belforti was born. The family subsequently moved to Melrose before moving to Sturbridge.

He served in the U.S. Army during the closing period of the Korean War and the subsequent Cold War (1953-55) and was a graduate of the Army Signal School in Monmouth, New Jersey (1953) and the Ordnance School in Aberdeen, Maryland (1954). He served with the 1st Army at Fort Totten, Bayside, NY, and Camp Hero, Montauk, NY. He was honorably discharged in 1963 after completing active and reserve duty for his country. For this, he was recognized by the United States and Commonwealth of Massachusetts governments, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the American Legion.

Mr. Belforte graduated from Northeastern University in Boston with degrees in Chemistry (1963) and Production Engineering (1970).

He was a member of the Research Staff at Raytheon Company in Waltham, MA, a sales engineer for Alloyd Corporation, Cambridge, MA, General Vacuum Corporation Medford, MA, and after their merger Alloyd General Corporation in Cambridge, MA. He was a co-founder of Electron Beam Corporation in Lynn, MA and in a merger with Thomson Electric Welder Company (a company established by the renowned inventor of resistance welding Elijah Thomson), he became Vice President and Co-owner of Thomson Welder Company.

Later he established the industrial laser products group at American Optical Corp. in Southbridge, MA where the first million pulses industrial glass laser was developed for drilling and spot welding. Subsequently, he established a subsidiary of Ferranti Electric (Scotland) in Sturbridge, MA, and introduced the laser cutting of sheet metal in North America.

He then became a Staff Member at Avco Everett in Everett, MA where he helped create Avco Everett Metalworking Lasers in Somerville, MA which installed the then highest power industrial lasers at Caterpillar Tractor, Fiat, Westinghouse, and others.

He established Belforte Associates, a consulting practice, in Sturbridge in 1982 and consulted in industrial laser material processing for many international clients.

In 1986 he co-authored the Industrial Laser Annual Handbook and its’ five subsequent editions. This was the first global publication to openly share industrial laser processing data. In 1986 he also founded and became Editor-in-Chief of Industrial Laser Review, a monthly (later bi-monthly as Industrial Laser Solutions) industrial laser magazine, then and until 2021, the only such publication read in 150 countries, focusing on industrial laser material processing.

In a long career in industrial laser processing, he wrote and published, hundreds of articles and technical papers and, taught short courses and lectures on this subject, in the United States, Europe, Asia, and the South Pacific. He was an invited speaker at conferences in 30 international countries. His columns on this subject appeared routinely in Industrial Laser Review (later Industrial Laser Solutions) and several other technical publications. He was also a Contributing Editor to Laser Focus World for three decades.

He was honored with the Laser Institute of America’s prestigious Arthur L. Schawlow Award for these educational efforts and elected as an Academician by the Ukraine Academy of Engineering Sciences. He became President, a Fellow, and a Life Member of the Laser Institute of America and was awarded (three times) for Valued Service. He was also: A life Member of the Society of Manufacturing Engineers, a Gold and Life Member of the American Welding Society, and appointed as a Distinguished Expert by Zhejiang University of Technology (China).

He retired, after 53 years of continuous service in the introduction and growth of industrial laser material processing technology.

In his private life, he was a consummate reader of non-fiction accumulating an extensive library on the history of World War II, and a voluminous reader of fiction, especially international police procedural mysteries. He was a music lover with a primary interest in Big Band music. In his youth and later in life he played drums in amateur bands. While in the Army he was a founding member of the Fort Monmouth Signaleers Drum and Bugle Corps that won championship recognition in New Jersey.

He appeared on the stage with the Drama Club of Framingham High School in their State Championship performance of I Remember Mama and later with the Civic League Players of Framingham in several productions. This led to a lifelong interest in theatre as a playgoer.

At one point in life, he was an amateur photographer specializing in landscapes, and his well-regarded views were taken in countries around the world.

He was a member of the American and New England Hosta Societies and his collection of more than 500 varieties of this plant was admired by many in his Sturbridge home.

At his request burial was private in North Cemetery, Sturbridge.

In lieu of flowers the family requests any donations to be made to the New England Hosta Society.

An online guestbook is available at www.BelangerFuneralHome.com

 

Belanger Bullard Funeral Home 51 Marcy St. Southbridge, MA 01550 is directing arrangements.

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

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