Electromechanical choppers for DC stabilization of vacuum-tube amplifiers are discussed in the post-WWII Radiation Laboratory Series books from the radar laboratory at MIT.
See: G E Valley Jr and H Wallman
Vacuum Tube Amplifiers, McGraw-Hill 1948, p 490 for a unique circuit (not using a chopper) in a DC amplifier.
Also, I A Greenwood Jr, J V Holdam Jr, and D MacRae Jr
Electronic Instruments McGraw-Hill 1948, where section 15-4 (pp 511 - 519) discusses "comparison circuits" that includes the Brown Converter and Leeds and Northrup vibrators. Practical DC precision power supply circuits using choppers are discussed in section 16-6 (pp 548 - 555), where one uses a Brown Converter.
Post-war, they became used in vacuum-tube operational amplifiers in analog computers.
I assume that the term "vibrator" used in the second book reflects the similarity to the vibrators used in car radios, etc., with a step-up transformer to obtain plate voltage supply from a low-voltage DC source (car battery).
In operational amplifiers, the term "chopper" became more common.
A history of op amps written by Jung for Analog Devices
https://www.analog.com/media/en/training-seminars/design-handbooks/Op-Amp-Applications/SectionH.pdf discusses chopper stabilization of vacuum tube operational amplifiers, putting the start date as 1949. (pp H17 ff).