Kempster Blanchard Miller (August 14, 1870 – November 22, 1933) was an American engineer, author, and businessman.
His brother was businessman, rancher and citrus farmer Azariel Blanchard Miller (1878–1941), founder of the city of Fontana, California.
In 1899, he published his seminal work American Telephone Practice, and became electrical engineer at the Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Company,[2] quickly ascending to lead the experimental shop and laboratory.
[3] He then formed an engineering consulting firm with Samuel G. McMeen in 1904 in Chicago, Illinois,[4] a partnership he maintained until 1919, when he became manager of the North Electric Manufacturing Company.
Brown, with donating 100 acres of land that would become Pilot Butte State Scenic View in Bend, Oregon.