You may or may not know that the Student’s t-test was named after William Sealy Gosset, head experimental brewer at Guinness, who published under the pseudonym “Student”. This is because Guinness preferred its employees to use pseudonyms when publishing scientific papers.
The part I didn’t know is that Guinness had a policy of granting study leave to technical staff, and Gosset took advantage of this during the first two terms of the 1906-1907 academic year. This sounds like a great idea to encourage boundary spanning.
This article is a very nice account of the story, with nice visuals (which will definitely make it into the beer preference example in my predictive analytics course).