Other professionals
The railways employed many other professionals: notably chemists, metallurgists, etc. Also key figures in railway prerservation.
Allen, G.H. Loftus
Head of LNWR Advertising and Publicity Department and of the LMS from
1927. He had joined the LNWR in 1913 and served as an RTO in France during
WW1. From September 1923 he spent six months in the USA in connection with
a scheme for goods representation of the LMS in the USA.
Ellis. London Midland &
Scottish. Charles Potter. In the offices of the LMS.
Backtrack, 1998, 12.
454.
Archbutt, Leonard
Archbutt was appointed chemist by Samuel Johnson, the Midland Railway
locomotive superintendent, in 1881. Archbutt became a major figure among
railway chemists and held office for 40 years. Archbutt was possibly fortunate
in marrying the daughter of the next locomotive superintendent of the Midland,
R.M. Deeley, but whether it was because of his marriage or as a true reflection
of his ability is unknown, although he was paid the extraordinary salary
for the time of £1,000 per annum. However, his achievements were many
and not all confined to railway chemistry. For example, in 1890 he was co-author
of a paper on the Thermodynamics of the Vacuum Brake, then co-inventor with
Deeley of a water softening process and joint author (again with Deeley)
of a standard text book on Lubrication, first published in 1900. He became
a Fellow of the Institute of Chemistry in 1888 and was a distinguished member
of both the Society of Chemical Industry and the Institute of Metals.
Wise Railway Research.
Armitage, William
Louth chemist and photographer who developed an explosive device which
served as a detonator to warn locomotive drivers to stop. He and his family
killed in an explosion at his home on 17 November 1849:
see A.J. Ludham, Backtrack, 1999,
13, 385.
Brebner, J.H. [Jock]
Head of public relations and publicity at the British Transport
Commission. Formerly with London Passenger Transport Board and before that
the Post Office and with Ministry of Information from 1937. Credited with
founding public relations and Gourvish credited him with a "textbook" which
unless it is part of grey literature was a pamhlet issued in 1949 and again
in 1969. Pearson Man of the rail
recorded that Brebner had previously served Lord Ashfield in a similar capacity
at the London Passenger Transport Board and before that had had a distinguished
career at the Post Office. Jock Brebner was a tall, heavily-built man in
his forties, with a ruddy complexion and a determined mouth. He was used
to getting his own way, and when roused he had a very fierce aspect. Of course,
behind it he was sentimental and kind, but in his business dealings he kept
this hidden. He was especially knowledgeable about public relations, particularly
in relation to the Press. He once told me that when he was appointed to the
Commission he had been informed he would be functionally responsible for
all the public relations and publicity of the Executives, as well as of the
Commission itself. This was not the understanding, for example, that the
Railway Executive had. They took the view that these matters were an integral
part of management, for which they had been established by the Act of 1947.
In no time there was friction, and Slim and Brebner and the members of the
Executive and the Commission were involved. The arguments went backwards
and forwards, and became bitter. The Railway Executive stood firm.
Cole, Sir Henry
Born Bath 15 July 1808. Educated Christ's Hospital. As well as being
a civil servant he was a successful journalist on the Railway Chronicle
and was greatly iinvolved in the Great Exhibition and the establishment of
the museums in South Kensington based on the Exhibition's profits. In spite
of being an untidy portly figure he clearly had influnce with Prince Albert.
Creator of Brompton Boilers, the precursor of the Science Museum. Died in
London on 18 April 1882. ODNB biography
by Ann Cooper. See also
Dunstone..
Dandridge, Cecil Gerald Graham
Born 29 August 1890, died 17 November 1960. Served WW1: Major Royal
Engineers; included service in Russia. Married Princess Olga Galitzine.in
1924. District Traffic Superintendent, Anatolian Railway, Turkey, 1919; Assistant
District Traffic Manager, GCR, Manchester, 1921; District Passenger Manager,
LNER, Manchester, 1923; London District Passenger Manager, LNER, 1926;
Advertising Manager, LNER, 1928; Assistant Passenger Manager, Southern Area,
LNER, 1942, Passenger Manager, 1944; Chairman., Railway. Executive Passenger
Committee, 194647; Acting Goods Manager, Southern. Area, LNER (in addition
to Passenger Manager), 1947 Chief Commercial Manager, Eastern Region, British
Railways, Liverpool St, 194855; retired 1955 CVO, 1948.
Dods, John
Swann was succeeded as chemist
at Crewe Works by another Chester College student, John Dods, but hr left
after three years and was succeeded by his
assistant Joseph Reddrop.
Wise Railway Research. Hunt
LMS Journal (17) 37 spells
name Dodds.
Fuller, C.J.F.
Chemist at Horwich Works: appointed in 1887.
Wise Railway Research..
Green, Leslie William
Born in Hampstead; died aged 33 of tuberculosis. Architect of Edwardian
London Underground buildings with Art Nouveau features especially in their
distinctive ceramic work. Sheila Taylor's The
moving Metropolis.
Lewis-Dale, Percy
Chief Chemist, LMS: see Paper
295 J. Instn Loco. Engrs. 1932, 22 (the chemist in relation to
railway engineering)
Mervyn, Hermione (Muriel Hermione Marion)
Born Dublin 6 October 1897: daughter of the Rector of Clontarf, Spent
some years in the office of the Director-General of Transport and Coal Controoler
in Ireland; later transferred to Ministry of Transport in London; and awarded
MBE for Government service during WW1. In 1926 became Assistant to Chief
Lady Welfare Supervisor at Euston and promoted to top job in 1930 from which
she resigned in 1937. Became mistress of Lemon: see
Terry Jenkins Sir Ernest Lemon
(portrait page 87) who hints that she may have bore him a son.
Reith, John Charles Walsham
Born on 20 July 1889 at Stonehaven; died on 16 June 1971 in Edinburgh.
Famous as general manager and then director-general of the British Broadcasting
Company, subsequently Corporation (BBC). In 1896 Reith entered at Glasgow
Academy, but when aged 15 was sent to Gresham's School at Holt, in Norfolk.
He did well at German and Latin, played at full-back for the school fifteen,
and became a good shot, and could run extremely fast. His father, a Free
Church of Scotalnd Minister, decreed he was no scholar and that instead of
going to university he should be apprenticed to the North British Locomotive
Company. The tedium and frustration of the next eight years were relieved
only by his military interests. He joined the 1st Lanarkshire rifle volunteers,
and in 1911 he was commissioned in the 5th Scottish rifles. Three years into
his apprenticeship Reith started his famous diary, which was to absorb
a disproportionate an amount of his time and energy over the next sixty years.
ODNB entry by Ian McIntyre.
Terry Jenkins notes that Ernest Lemon
called Reith "an old friend".
Rothery, Henry Cadogan
Born in London in 1817; educated at St John's College, Cambridge,
where he graduated BA in mathematics in 1840 and MA in 1845. After leaving
the university he entered at Doctors' Commons (College of Advocates and Doctors
of Law), and from 1842 was employed in the ecclesiastical and Admiralty courts.
On account of the large experience he had gathered in the court of Admiralty,
in 1876 Rothery was appointed by the government as commissioner to inquire
into the causes and circumstances of wrecks, and to conduct investigations
into casualties at sea. He made a number of important decisions concerning
the prevention of maritime losses through the safe storage of cargo. He reported
on the Tay Bridge disaster and his report differed from that by Barlow and
Yolland in that he criticised Hutchinson who had performed the initial bridge
inspection. He retired in the early summer of 1888, and died at Ribsden,
Bagshot, Surrey, on 1 August 1888. ODNB entry
by G. C. Boase, rev. Eric Metcalfe which does not mention the Tay Bridge
connection for which see Nisbet,
Backtrack, 2010, 24, 302.
Sherrington, Charles Ely Rose
Son of very famous father (medical scientist and Nobel Laureate) who
shares same name. Probably an economist and statistician. Author of
ODNB entry for
Acworth and founder and head of Railway
Reaserch Service, British Railways. This was based at the London School of
Economics and funded by the four main line companies. It issued a monthly
intelligence journal and an annual assessment of the world's railways. The
LMS invited him to be a member of its Steel Rolling Stock Committee. Sherrington
had large private document collection accessed by
George Ottley page 23 (original volume
prelims). Large number of Sherrington publications in
Ottley. Terry Jenkins Sir Ernest
Lemon contains a considerable amount of information about
Sherry..
Smith, [Sir] Francis Petit
Inventor of a screw propeller, was born on 9 February 1808, probably at
Copperhurst Farm, about 6 miles from Hythe, Kent. He was educated at a private
school in Ashford and began work as a grazing farmer on Romney Marsh, but
later moved to Hendon, Middlesex, still as a farmer. As a boy he built many
model boats and displayed great ingenuity in developing their propulsion.
He continued to devote much time to this subject and by 1835 he had built
a model propelled by a screw, driven by a spring, which was so successful
that he was convinced that this form of propeller would be superior to the
paddle wheel, then universally used by steamships. Over a considerable period
Smith was in contact with the Admiralty concerning screw propulsion and this
eventually led to the construction of a demonstration vessel the
Archimedes which performed well, but the Admiralty refused to recompense
Smith. Although screw propulsion may seem far removed from locomotive development
it is noteworthy that Smith worked amicably with
Ericcson who also contributed
to the development of screw propulsion as well as to locomotive
development.
The Admiralty's decision not to purchase the Archimedes led to the
failure of Smith's company and he was only partially compensated by his share
of an ex gratia payment of £20,000 by the Admiralty in 1851, to be shared
among all propeller designers. His patent expired in 1856 and he retired
to Guernsey as a farmer, but Smith's many friends came to his assistance;
he was awarded a civil-list pension of £200 in 1855, and two years later
there was a subscription on his behalf as a result of which he received a
service of plate and £2678; among the subscribers were Brunel and Lloyd.
In 1860 he was offered the post of director of the Patent Office museum (now
the Science Museum) and in 1871 he was knighted. He died in South Kensington
on 12 February 1874. ODNB entry by David K. Brown
who does not mention his great contribution to locomotive preservation which
is considered by Dunstone..
Stewart, S.
Chemist at St. Rollox Works, Glasgow, from 1882.
Wise Railway Research.
Swann, E.
Appointed at Crewe Works in 1864, former student of Chester College,
as an analytical chemist at a salary of £2 per week. Swann was put to
work in a hut in the works; his primary duties were in connection with the
Bessemer plant, but he was soon involved in the analysis of other things,
particularly oil, coal, coke, paint and non-ferrous metals. Water continued
also to be an important problem especially when there were further outbreaks
of cholera due to inadequate sewers. After one year Swann was given an assistant
because of the volume of work, but in 1867.
Railway Research. Hunt
LMS Journal (17) 37 .
Stringemore, F.H.
Senior London Transport graphic artist. Reposnsible for pre-Beck maps
of Underground, and also graphics for Stephenson Locomotive Society.
See Fell and Hennessey Backtrack,
2009, 23, 646.
Turner, T. Henry
Appointed Chief Chemist & Metallurgist to LNER in 1931. Significant
contributor to discussions of Institution of Locomtive Engineers. In discussion
on Glascodine's (J. Instn Loco. Engrs,
1936, 26 ,Paper 350) paper on buffing Turner advocated the
use of rubber in shear. He could be very sharp in his response to what he
regarded as poor metallurgical practice: for instance, he was highly crritical
of some of the techniques advocated by Cox in his paper on Locomotive wheels,
tyres and axles (J. Instn Loco.
Enrgs, Paper 346) in a long contribution
to the discussion where he noted the inappropriate use of copper, rather
than zinc, as an interlayer between the tyre and rim and noted the destructive
nature of molten white metal with hot steel where it cut like a knife. His
interests were exceptionally broad: he
contributed to a not very exciting paper on railcar development on British
Railways noting that the front end should be sloping to avoid turbulence
when two units passed at speed. He was also damning of the failure to employ
Buck-eye couplings on the railcars.
said that the Author had omitted two conditions of operation which should
be mentioned, in view of the statement that the public motor coach did "ride
rather well" Surely there was no public motor coach in which a passenger
could write at 60 m.p.h., as was done regularly in the ordinary mainline
coaches of a train.
Discussion on Papers
Graff-Baker, W.S. Considerations on bogie design with particular reference
to electric railways. J. Instn Loco
Engrs., 1952, 42, 349-50. (Paper 513)
Discussion: 350-1: The Author had rightly said that the problem must be
considered in regard to the bogie plus the rail. The road vehicle never had
to go backwards for the same distance and at the same speed, and that was
one of the features which had to be considered in the design of the bogie.
The "toe-ing in" or castoring action possible with some other types of vehicle
could not be considered in bogie design for rail vehicles. A train feature
that applied to the electrical bogies for two-thirds of the systems in Britain
was that thev must'conduct electricity. Four-rail systems were relatively
few in Britain; so that the current was likely to flow through the components
of the bogie.
Uneveness over rail joints and lateral track irregularities could both be
reduced by butt-welding the rails. At the time he had joined the railway
service, civil engineers had been afraid of lateral deformation of the track
and catastrophic deformation of the track in hot weather. It had been definitely
proved that they were dangers about which there need be no worry, where long
welded rails were used. He knew of no case where the long welded rail had
been catastrophically deformed. The only rails that had so deformed, in railway
experience, were those in which there were expansion joints. From French
work which had been done on the subject, it would be seen that use of the
expansion joint was courting catastrophic deformation under thermal expansion
in the hotter parts of the year. Hence, there was no reason why rail joint
bumps should be considered inevitable. The Author had spoken of axles having
lasted longer than they should have done according to theory. Probably that
was due to the absence of corrosion. Experience had shown that the average
mainline axle would fail by corrosion fatigue in a relatively few years,
if it weFe machined. Experience equally showed that thorough painting would
preserve it for very many years. Corrosion could shorten the service life
to a quarter of what it might have been. Before very expensive pneumatic
tyres were adopted, with their greatly increased friction, he hoped that
Mr. Trittons recommendation would bear fruit, and that the rubber-spring
wheel-centre would be considered. With that there was little friction and
little unsprung weight. Four or five years previously, when he had approached
the biggest rubber undertaking in Britain, they had seen no reason why the
success which had been achieved in the tramcars in the United States,
Switzerland, and Sweden should not be matched in largerscale wheels, or why
the trouble with heat from braking should not be overcome.
The lateral stability of the bogie deserved further experiment. Vertical
rigidity was obviously necessary, but by design of the sides so that the
one would contract and the other expand (which was possible), he was certain
that the winding up which took place in the frame at the expense of abrasion
of the rail could be avoided. If roller bearings were used, however, provision
would have to be made in the shops to ensure that electric currents did not
pass, because it was clear that, in certain of the electrified lines, arcing
had been occurring from the race to the rollers.
Wise, S. Why metals break. Rly
Div. J., 1971, 2, 182-3.
T. Henry Turner, M.Sc. (182-3) raised the
following points:
1. Transverse Fissures. The slide of a rail fracture shown by the Author,
concerning which Professor A. G. Smith had asked for information, should
be classified as a transverse crack or two-stage failure. (Four illustrations
typical of these failures can be seen on page 25 of the Rail Failures
booklet that Mr. Turner produced in 1944 to standardise reporting, description
and classification. The printed booklet was later issued to all British Railways'
civil engineers by the Railway Executive in 1948.) This transverse fissure
had a smooth, round or kidney-shaped patch which sometimes exhibited a silvery
centre. Its nucleus may be a 'shatter crack' or inclusion, or the fissure
may be associated with wheel burn or weld deposit.
2. Clinks. Mr. Wise's illustration that interested Professor Smith was comparable
with the 'clink' rightly feared by steelmakers and engineers. Turner had
worked with the huge masses of steel needed for the electrical generator
'rotors' in the early 1920s. Cooling from molten state and forging to machine
shop temperatures, the outside steel solidified and hardened while the middle
of the mass had still to lose heat and shrink. Thus it sometimes happened,
if the cooling was not very slow indeed, that contraction stresses, concentrating
on ingot centre impurity weaknesses, caused the formation of an internal,
transverse, convexo-convex lens-shaped fissure by a sudden 'clink'. This
could occur when the large steel forging was at rest, and was in no way affected
by external forces. Consequently the practice of trepanning a three-inch
hole right through the centre of the longitudinal axis was adopted. If the
core came out in one piece there was probably no clink, but to add certainty
they developed a long-range microscope that was subsequently named a boroscope.
American rails had so many of these transverse, at first invisible, fractures
that special railcars were made by Sperry to detect invisible fissures in
rails in their tracks so that they could be removed before fracture. Continental
rails had less of this type of rail failure, their rail heads having relatively
smaller masses of steel. In Britain where rails were mainly made from open-hearth
steel, and where climatic extremes of temperature were less on steelmaker's
rail banks than in America, there were extremely few transverse fissures
in steel rails.
3. Nature of Metals. When puzzling about why metals break engineers must
try, like metallurgists, to have in mind the fundamental nature of metals.
With the very rare exception of noble metals like gold, the Creator made
our metals to have strong affinity for oxygen, sulphur and other elements.
Found in nature as earthy material compounds of several elements together,
metals were only extracted with much difficulty from their earthy or stoney
ores. Metals used by engineers naturally reverted to brittle compounds;
dissolving in acids, corroding in moisture, tarnishing and blackening in
sulphur fumes, oxidising at flame temperatures. Although nickel and copper
differed in their modes of straining, the Author had rightly concentrated
on what he had observed in steels because most mechanical engineering was
steel, ca~t) iron or their alloys.
4. Rail Bolt Hole. The Author's illustration of a fracture at a steel mil
fish-plate bolt hole could be a memorable lesson. The civil engineer had
drilled a hole in the rail web leaving a sharp edge that concentrated rail
impact stresses. More important it concentrated corrosion because moist
sulphurous air corroded the sharp-edged steel from both sides. It was foolish
to expect paint, tar or oil to sit protectively on any sharp edge. Smoothly
rounding-off the bolt hole edge increased the life of the essential zinc,
paint or other anti-corrosive, and so reduced the loss of steel at a stress
concentration area that was no longer a point. That was an important lesson,
but since 1933 we have known that flash-butt welding of rails avoids bolt-hole
corrosion, stress concentration and 70 per cent of rail failures.
5. The Environment Matters. In considering "Why Metals' Break", Turner said
engineers must now remember that during the past 30 years many outstanding
advances in practice have been brought about by altering the environment
in which metals work.
There is much less metal loss in furnaces and machine shops because control
of furnace atmospheres has revolutionised heat treatment of metals.
Control of boiler water chemical treatment made Mr. Bulleid's famous locomotives'
steel fireboxes last for more than a dozen years instead of failing in six
months. Control of ships' boiler waters greatly increased the availability
of warships and merchant vessels. Control of the chemical treatment of land
boilers made possible the present giant electricity generating plant boilers
on which we all depend.
Control of anti-corrosive in summer as well as winter coolants for internal
combustion engines has done more than anything else to increase the useful
life of road vehicle motors. Control of air pollution brightened towns, increased
their sunlight and also appreciably reduced the atmospheric corrosion of
our metals.
Robson, A.E. Railcar development on British
Railways.. J. Instn Loco Engrs.,
1962, 52, 113-114. refers to Renault railcars and its influnce
on A4 and bluntness of BR product, also it lack of Buckeye couplers.
Papers
Boiler water treatment: a general review. Corrosion Prevention &
Control, 1956, 3, 37-40..
Wise, Sam
"Sam", as he preferred to be known, was born in London on 1 August
1917 and attended the Dulwich Hamlet London County Council School. From there
he won a Junior County Scholarship in 1928, which took him to Sloane School
for the next five years. On matriculating at the end of this period, he moved
to the Crewe Locomotive Works of the LMS as an engineering apprentice
where he did the usual round, gathering experience in the various workshops
undertaking the building and repair of steam locomotives. Between the years
1933-1938 he also acquired both Ordinary National Certificate and Higher
National Certificate in Mechanical Engineering, studying at Crewe Technical
College and Manchester College of Technology, before taking up an appointment
as assistant to the Works Engineer at Crewe for three years and then as Assistant
Works Metallurgist, LMS, at Crewe between 1941 and 1944. At the same time
he was again studying at night school, this time diversifying into welding
and metallurgy and acquiring City and Guilds Certificates.
In 1944 he moved to Ashford as Assistant Head of the Physical Laboratory,
Mechanical Engineering Research Department, Southern Railway, where he was
involved in a wide range of work including developments in non-destructive
testing and experimental stress analysis, which both featured to a considerable
extent in his later work. The LMS and Southern Railway Research Departments
were combined in 1951 at which point Sam became Senior Engineering Assistant,
BR Research Department, Ashford, for two years before moving to Derby as
Senior Scientific Officer and then Senior Principal Scientific Officer in
charge of the Strength of Materials Group up until 1961.
As Assistant Director (Mechanical) of the Engineering Division of British
Railways' Research Department from 1961 to 1972 Sam was responsible for a
wide range of activities including, at different times, Strength of Materials,
Structures, Metallurgy, Non-destructive Testing, Instrumentation, Drawing
Office, etc. Between 1972 and 1982 Sam was Materials and Inspection Engineer
and later Quality Assurance Manger, British Rail, in the Director of Mechanical
and Electrical Engineer's Department where he oversaw the transition from
traditional methods of Inspection to Suppliers' Quality Assurance.
After retirement in 1982, he acted as a Senior Mechanical Engineering Consultant
on behalf of Transmark. As a Fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers,
Sam was very active in Railway Division affairs as evidenced by his winning
the George Stephenson Prize for papers in 1960, 1970 and 1973. He was a Fellow
of the Institution of Non-destructive Testing and a Member of the Institution
of Metallurgists. During his retirement Sam continued his involvement with
all three institutions and at the same time commenced writing his book on
the history of Railway Research in the UK. After his death in November 1992
it was decided that the book as far as he had completed it, was much too
valuable as a source document to lose. As a mark of respect to a dedicated
Railway Engineer, his work was collated and edited by colleagues and is published
in Railway research..
Woodcroft, Bennet
Bennet Woodcroft was born 29 December 1803 at Heaton Norris, near
Stockport. Both parents had come from Sheffield, but by 1800 his father John
Woodcroft was established as a merchant and manufacturer of silk and muslin.
He accumulated a large fortune which was subsequently dissipated by speculation
in railway shares. Bennet Woodcroft was apprenticed to a silk weaver at
Failsworth, near Manchester, and subsequently studied chemistry under John
Dalton. Woodcroft made his first successful patent application in 1827 for
inventing a method of printing yarn before weavinga process of great
commercial value. He joined his father in partnership about 1828, but had
parted company before 1840. Woodcroft's other patents were one of 1838 for
improved tappets for loomshis most successful inventionand a
series of increasing pitch screw propellers, patented in 1832, 1844, and
1851. He was one of several inventors working to improve propellers, as marine
engines came into use in naval vessels, who were persuaded to pool their
claims upon the Admiralty; Woodcroft was a witness at the hearings and shared
in the £20,000 parliamentary reward.
Whilst in Manchester Woodcroft joined the Manchester Literary and Philosophical
Society, where he developed friendships with the leading engineers of the
town, including Joseph Whitworth, James Nasmyth, Richard Roberts, Eaton
Hodgkinson, and Richard Fairbairn. About 1843 he set up as a consulting engineer
and patent agent, moving in 1846 to London. In April 1847 he was appointed
professor of machinery at University College, London, but found teaching
uncongenial and resigned in June 1851.
When the Patent Law Amendment Act was passed in 1852 Woodcroft was appointed
assistant to the commissioner of patents, responsible for specifications.
This position brought him into close contact with Prince Albert, who, following
the success of the Great Exhibition of 1851, was encouraging manufacturers
to take advantage of the new patent law to improve their designs and products.
As a consulting engineer Woodcroft realized that the major obstacle to a
modern patent system was the difficulty of seeing earlier specifications
and the lack of indexes. In the space of five years he published 14,359
specifications granted between 1617 and 1852, together with indexes, which
the commissioners bought from him for £1000. He also prepared classified
abridgements and various ancillary technical documents. Copies were presented
to more than a hundred free public libraries as well as to many foreign and
colonial libraries, and were freely on sale. Thus it is appropriate that
the City of Yarmouth Library holds a copy of Bennet's Alphabetical index
of patentees of inventions, 1617-1852. Sadly, the collection of patent
literature was lost in a bombing raid during WW2 and reparation from Germany
was not sought.
To assist in dealing with the patents, Woodcroft amassed, largely at his
own expense, numerous technical books, which he handed over to form the nucleus
of the Patent Office Library, opened to the public in 1855 and later incorporated
in the British Library. He collected portraits of inventors and, perhaps
inspired by collections held in the United States patent office, gathered
models of inventions from the Society of Arts and elsewhere. He also rescued
from oblivion in Edinburgh the first marine engine, that invented by William
Symington. These historic items went in 1857 to the new South Kensington
Museum and were later transferred to the Science Museum. Woodcroft was elected
a fellow of the Royal Society in 1859. He retired on 31 March 1876 and died
at his home in South Kensington on 7 February 1879, and is buried in
Brompton cemetery. Based on ODNB entry by Anita
McConnell.
Alphabetical index of patentees of inventions, 1617-1852