America by Design: Science, Technology, and the Rise of Corporate Capitalism is Noble's 1977 first book, tracing the institutional capture of American engineering and scientific education by corporate interests between 1880 and 1930. The book demonstrated that the modern engineering profession — its curricula, its credentialing structures, its research priorities, its professional societies — was designed by and for the large industrial corporations that needed reliable technical labor. The engineer's supposedly neutral expertise, Noble showed, was from its origins shaped to serve corporate rather than public interests, and the institutions that trained engineers were structured accordingly.
The book's archival scope was extraordinary: corporate records, university correspondence, professional society minutes, accreditation board proceedings, and the papers of key figures like Charles Steinmetz (General Electric), Frederick Terman (Stanford), and Vannevar Bush (MIT). Across these sources, Noble reconstructed how corporations funded engineering schools on terms that shaped curricula toward their needs, how they placed their executives on university boards, how