Harry Diamond became the Chief of the Electronics Division. The National Bureau of Standards was brought into the program, and he was given responsibility for this phase of the Bureau's work. Within about four months of the start of the program, Diamond's group established feasibility of the radio proximity fuze through conclusive tests in bombs dropped at the Naval Proving Ground at
Dahlgren, Va. Throughout World War II, this group acted as the central laboratory of Division 4 of the
National Defense Research Committee, where Diamond was the central figure of the group. Much of the basic
proximity fuze technology was developed under his direction. Later, as Chief of the Ordnance Development Division, he was assigned the task of supervising the development of proximity fuzes for nonrotating projectiles such as bombs, rockets, and mortars. It was calculated that a fuze which would explode a projectile near a plane or at some height above a target on the surface would increase lethality. Diamond, through his vast knowledge in the field of electronics, contributed greatly to the fundamental concept and design of proximity fuzes. He held 16 patents for electronics-related inventions. The Ordnance Development Division, upon transfer from the National Bureau of Standards to the Army in 1953, was named the Diamond Ordnance Fuze Laboratories in honor of Mr. Diamond. It has since been renamed the
Harry Diamond Laboratories. The War Department later described inventor Harry Diamond's proximity fuze as "
one of the outstanding scientific developments of World War II ... second only to the atomic bomb" in military importance. ==Personal life==