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(1841-1852)

  • 1 Queen's Bench Reports

    1) Общая лексика: (Adolphus and Ellis, New Series) сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, новая серия, составители Адольфус и Эллис (1841-1852) [год] Q.B. Law Reports, Queen's Bench Division правовой сборник, решения отделения (за указанный год)
    2) Юридический термин: сборник канадских решений Суда королевской скамьи (1844-1881), сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи (новая серия, составители Адольфус и Эллис, 1841-1852)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Queen's Bench Reports

  • 2 Adolphus and Ellis's Queen's Bench Reports

    Юридический термин: сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи (составители Адольфус и Эллис, 1834-1840), сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи составители Адольфус и Эллис, новая серия (1841-1852), сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, составители Адольфус и Эллис (1834-1840)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Adolphus and Ellis's Queen's Bench Reports

  • 3 Adolphus and Ellis's Queen's Bench Reports, New Series

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Adolphus and Ellis's Queen's Bench Reports, New Series

  • 4 Queen's Bench Reports (Adolphus and Ellis, New Series)

    Общая лексика: сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, новая серия, составители Адольфус и Эллис (1841-1852) [год] Q.B. Law Reports, Queen's Bench Division правовой сборник, решения отделения (за указанный год)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Queen's Bench Reports (Adolphus and Ellis, New Series)

  • 5 Queen's Bench Reports, Adolphus and Ellis (New Series)

    Юридический термин: сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, новая серия, составители Адольфус и Эллис (1841-1852)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Queen's Bench Reports, Adolphus and Ellis (New Series)

  • 6 Queen's Bench Reports, Adolphus and Ellis

    Юридический термин: (New Series) сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, новая серия, составители Адольфус и Эллис (1841-1852)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Queen's Bench Reports, Adolphus and Ellis

  • 7 A.&E.(N.S.)

    сокр. от Adolphus and Ellis's Queen's Bench Reports, New Series
    сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, составители Адольфус и Эллис, новая серия (1841-1852)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > A.&E.(N.S.)

  • 8 Q.B.

    сокр.
    1) [Queen's Bench] Суд королевской скамьи

    ... Q.B. Law Reports, Queen's Bench Division — правовой сборник, решения отделения Суда королевской скамьи ( за указанный год)

    2) [Queen's Bench Reports (Adolphus and Ellis, New Series)] сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, новая серия, составители Адольфус и Эллис (1841-1852)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Q.B.

  • 9 Q.B.R.

    сокр. от Queen's Bench Reports, Adolphus and Ellis (New Series)
    сборник решений Суда королевской скамьи, новая серия, составители Адольфус и Эллис (1841-1852)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Q.B.R.

  • 10 Bain, Alexander

    [br]
    b. October 1810 Watten, Scotland
    d. 2 January 1877 Kirkintilloch, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish inventor and entrepreneur who laid the foundations of electrical horology and designed an electromagnetic means of transmitting images (facsimile).
    [br]
    Alexander Bain was born into a crofting family in a remote part of Scotland. He was apprenticed to a watchmaker in Wick and during that time he was strongly influenced by a lecture on "Heat, sound and electricity" that he heard in nearby Thurso. This lecture induced him to take up a position in Clerkenwell in London, working as a journeyman clockmaker, where he was able to further his knowledge of electricity by attending lectures at the Adelaide Gallery and the Polytechnic Institution. His thoughts naturally turned to the application of electricity to clockmaking, and despite a bitter dispute with Charles Wheatstone over priority he was granted the first British patent for an electric clock. This patent, taken out on 11 January 1841, described a mechanism for an electric clock, in which an oscillating component of the clock operated a mechanical switch that initiated an electromagnetic pulse to maintain the regular, periodic motion. This principle was used in his master clock, produced in 1845. On 12 December of the same year, he patented a means of using electricity to control the operation of steam railway engines via a steam-valve. His earliest patent was particularly far-sighted and anticipated most of the developments in electrical horology that occurred during the nineteenth century. He proposed the use of electricity not only to drive clocks but also to distribute time over a distance by correcting the hands of mechanical clocks, synchronizing pendulums and using slave dials (here he was anticipated by Steinheil). However, he was less successful in putting these ideas into practice, and his electric clocks proved to be unreliable. Early electric clocks had two weaknesses: the battery; and the switching mechanism that fed the current to the electromagnets. Bain's earth battery, patented in 1843, overcame the first defect by providing a reasonably constant current to drive his clocks, but unlike Hipp he failed to produce a reliable switch.
    The application of Bain's numerous patents for electric telegraphy was more successful, and he derived most of his income from these. They included a patent of 12 December 1843 for a form of fax machine, a chemical telegraph that could be used for the transmission of text and of images (facsimile). At the receiver, signals were passed through a moving band of paper impregnated with a solution of ammonium nitrate and potassium ferrocyanide. For text, Morse code signals were used, and because the system could respond to signals faster than those generated by hand, perforated paper tape was used to transmit the messages; in a trial between Paris and Lille, 282 words were transmitted in less than one minute. In 1865 the Abbé Caselli, a French engineer, introduced a commercial fax service between Paris and Lyons, based on Bain's device. Bain also used the idea of perforated tape to operate musical wind instruments automatically. Bain squandered a great deal of money on litigation, initially with Wheatstone and then with Morse in the USA. Although his inventions were acknowledged, Bain appears to have received no honours, but when towards the end of his life he fell upon hard times, influential persons in 1873 secured for him a Civil List Pension of £80 per annum and the Royal Society gave him £150.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1841, British patent no. 8,783; 1843, British patent no. 9,745; 1845, British patent no.
    10,838; 1847, British patent no. 11,584; 1852, British patent no. 14,146 (all for electric clocks).
    1852, A Short History of the Electric Clocks with Explanation of Their Principles and
    Mechanism and Instruction for Their Management and Regulation, London; reprinted 1973, introd. W.Hackmann, London: Turner \& Devereux (as the title implies, this pamphlet was probably intended for the purchasers of his clocks).
    Further Reading
    The best account of Bain's life and work is in papers by C.A.Aked in Antiquarian Horology: "Electricity, magnetism and clocks" (1971) 7: 398–415; "Alexander Bain, the father of electrical horology" (1974) 9:51–63; "An early electric turret clock" (1975) 7:428–42. These papers were reprinted together (1976) in A Conspectus of Electrical Timekeeping, Monograph No. 12, Antiquarian Horological Society: Tilehurst.
    J.Finlaison, 1834, An Account of Some Remarkable Applications of the Electric Fluid to the Useful Arts by Alexander Bain, London (a contemporary account between Wheatstone and Bain over the invention of the electric clock).
    J.Munro, 1891, Heroes of the Telegraph, Religious Tract Society.
    J.Malster \& M.J.Bowden, 1976, "Facsimile. A Review", Radio \&Electronic Engineer 46:55.
    D.J.Weaver, 1982, Electrical Clocks and Watches, Newnes.
    T.Hunkin, 1993, "Just give me the fax", New Scientist (13 February):33–7 (provides details of Bain's and later fax devices).
    DV / KF

    Biographical history of technology > Bain, Alexander

  • 11 Scott, Winfield

    (1786-1866) Скотт, Уинфилд
    Военный и политический деятель. Участник англо-американской войны 1812-14 [ War of 1812]. Генерал с 1841. В 1841-61 командовал сухопутными силами США [ Army, U.S.]. Участвовал в нескольких войнах с индейцами [ Indian Wars]. Непосредственно командовал войсками в крупных сражениях американо-мексиканской войны [ Mexican War] 1846-48, в том числе в битвах за Веракрус, Серро-Гордо и Чапультепек; захватил г. Мехико. В 1852 выдвигал свою кандидатуру на пост президента от Партии вигов [ Whigs]. Получил прозвище "Любитель суматохи с перьями" ["Old Fuss and Feathers"] за свою любовь к помпезным военным церемониалам и парадной военной форме. Это прозвище употребляли как его противники, так и друзья

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Scott, Winfield

  • 12 Talbot, William Henry Fox

    [br]
    b. 11 February 1800 Melbury, England
    d. 17 September 1877 Lacock, Wiltshire, England
    [br]
    English scientist, inventor of negative—positive photography and practicable photo engraving.
    [br]
    Educated at Harrow, where he first showed an interest in science, and at Cambridge, Talbot was an outstanding scholar and a formidable mathematician. He published over fifty scientific papers and took out twelve English patents. His interests outside the field of science were also wide and included Assyriology, etymology and the classics. He was briefly a Member of Parliament, but did not pursue a parliamentary career.
    Talbot's invention of photography arose out of his frustrating attempts to produce acceptable pencil sketches using popular artist's aids, the camera discura and camera lucida. From his experiments with the former he conceived the idea of placing on the screen a paper coated with silver salts so that the image would be captured chemically. During the spring of 1834 he made outline images of subjects such as leaves and flowers by placing them on sheets of sensitized paper and exposing them to sunlight. No camera was involved and the first images produced using an optical system were made with a solar microscope. It was only when he had devised a more sensitive paper that Talbot was able to make camera pictures; the earliest surviving camera negative dates from August 1835. From the beginning, Talbot noticed that the lights and shades of his images were reversed. During 1834 or 1835 he discovered that by placing this reversed image on another sheet of sensitized paper and again exposing it to sunlight, a picture was produced with lights and shades in the correct disposition. Talbot had discovered the basis of modern photography, the photographic negative, from which could be produced an unlimited number of positives. He did little further work until the announcement of Daguerre's process in 1839 prompted him to publish an account of his negative-positive process. Aware that his photogenic drawing process had many imperfections, Talbot plunged into further experiments and in September 1840, using a mixture incorporating a solution of gallic acid, discovered an invisible latent image that could be made visible by development. This improved calotype process dramatically shortened exposure times and allowed Talbot to take portraits. In 1841 he patented the process, an exercise that was later to cause controversy, and between 1844 and 1846 produced The Pencil of Nature, the world's first commercial photographically illustrated book.
    Concerned that some of his photographs were prone to fading, Talbot later began experiments to combine photography with printing and engraving. Using bichromated gelatine, he devised the first practicable method of photo engraving, which was patented as Photoglyphic engraving in October 1852. He later went on to use screens of gauze, muslin and finely powdered gum to break up the image into lines and dots, thus anticipating modern photomechanical processes.
    Talbot was described by contemporaries as the "Father of Photography" primarily in recognition of his discovery of the negative-positive process, but he also produced the first photomicrographs, took the first high-speed photographs with the aid of a spark from a Leyden jar, and is credited with proposing infra-red photography. He was a shy man and his misguided attempts to enforce his calotype patent made him many enemies. It was perhaps for this reason that he never received the formal recognition from the British nation that his family felt he deserved.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS March 1831. Royal Society Rumford Medal 1842. Grand Médaille d'Honneur, L'Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1855. Honorary Doctorate of Laws, Edinburgh University, 1863.
    Bibliography
    1839, "Some account of the art of photographic drawing", Royal Society Proceedings 4:120–1; Phil. Mag., XIV, 1839, pp. 19–21.
    8 February 1841, British patent no. 8842 (calotype process).
    1844–6, The Pencil of Nature, 6 parts, London (Talbot'a account of his invention can be found in the introduction; there is a facsimile edn, with an intro. by Beamont Newhall, New York, 1968.
    Further Reading
    H.J.P.Arnold, 1977, William Henry Fox Talbot, London.
    D.B.Thomas, 1964, The First Negatives, London (a lucid concise account of Talbot's photograph work).
    J.Ward and S.Stevenson, 1986, Printed Light, Edinburgh (an essay on Talbot's invention and its reception).
    H.Gernsheim and A.Gernsheim, 1977, The History of Photography, London (a wider picture of Talbot, based primarily on secondary sources).
    JW

    Biographical history of technology > Talbot, William Henry Fox

  • 13 Everett, Edward

    (1794-1865) Эверетт, Эдвард
    Религиозный и государственный деятель, оратор. Будучи священником Унитарной церкви, стал первым американцем, получившим диплом доктора философии [ Ph.D.]. С 1815 - профессор греческого языка Гарвардского университета [ Harvard University]. В 1825-35 - член Конгресса США. Губернатор штата Массачусетс в 1836-39, посланник США в Великобритании в 1841-45, президент Гарвардского университета 1846-49. Госсекретарь [ Secretary of State] в 1852-53. Кандидат на пост вице-президента от Партии конституционного союза [ Constitutional Union Party] на выборах 1860. Когда началась Гражданская война [ Civil War], поддержал Линкольна [ Lincoln, Abraham]

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Everett, Edward

  • 14 Greenough, Horatio

    (1805-1852) Гриноу, Хорейшо
    Скульптор, искусствовед. Большую часть жизни провел в Италии. Работал в стиле неоклассицизма. Наиболее известная работа - памятник Дж. Вашингтону [ Washington, George] (1841) в Смитсоновском институте [ Smithsonian Institution]

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Greenough, Horatio

  • 15 Webster, Daniel

    (1782-1852) Уэбстер, Дэниел
    Юрист, государственный и политический деятель. В 1810-е федералист [ Federalist Party], с 1832 вместе с Г. Клеем [ Clay, Henry] стал одним из лидеров Партии вигов [ Whigs]. Избирался в Палату представителей [ House of Representatives] (1813-17, 1823-27) и Сенат [ Senate, U.S.] (1827-41, 1845-50). Госсекретарь [ Secretary of State] в 1841-43 и 1850-52. В 1842 заключил договор о границе между США и английскими владениями на северо-востоке [ Webster-Ashburton Treaty]. Активно участвовал в политической жизни, занимая четкие позиции по большинству актуальных проблем: против политики эмбарго в 1808 [ Embargo Act, Macon's Bill No. 2], в поддержку высоких пошлин, выгодных промышленникам Новой Англии [ Nullification Crisis], в поддержку Второго банка Соединенных Штатов [ Second Bank of the United States], в поддержку Компромисса 1850 [ Compromise of 1850] ради сохранения единства страны, против войны с Мексикой [ Mexican War] и аннексии Техаса [ Texas Revolution]. Как юрист успешно выступал в Верховном суде США [ Supreme Court, U.S.] по ряду крупнейших прецедентных дел [ Dartmouth College v. Woodward, McCulloch v. Maryland] и стал известен как "защитник Конституции" ["Defender of the Constitution"]. Славился своим красноречием, до сих пор считается крупнейшим оратором в истории США. В 1900 избран в национальную Галерею славы [ Hall of Fame].

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Webster, Daniel

  • 16 Adamson, Daniel

    [br]
    b. 1818 Shildon, Co. Durham, England
    d. January 1890 Didsbury, Manchester, England
    [br]
    English mechanical engineer, pioneer in the use of steel for boilers, which enabled higher pressures to be introduced; pioneer in the use of triple-and quadruple-expansion mill engines.
    [br]
    Adamson was apprenticed between 1835 and 1841 to Timothy Hackworth, then Locomotive Superintendent on the Stockton \& Darlington Railway. After this he was appointed Draughtsman, then Superintendent Engineer, at that railway's locomotive works until in 1847 he became Manager of Shildon Works. In 1850 he resigned and moved to act as General Manager of Heaton Foundry, Stockport. In the following year he commenced business on his own at Newton Moor Iron Works near Manchester, where he built up his business as an iron-founder and boilermaker. By 1872 this works had become too small and he moved to a 4 acre (1.6 hectare) site at Hyde Junction, Dukinfield. There he employed 600 men making steel boilers, heavy machinery including mill engines fitted with the American Wheelock valve gear, hydraulic plant and general millwrighting. His success was based on his early recognition of the importance of using high-pressure steam and steel instead of wrought iron. In 1852 he patented his type of flanged seam for the firetubes of Lancashire boilers, which prevented these tubes cracking through expansion. In 1862 he patented the fabrication of boilers by drilling rivet holes instead of punching them and also by drilling the holes through two plates held together in their assembly positions. He had started to use steel for some boilers he made for railway locomotives in 1857, and in 1860, only four years after Bessemer's patent, he built six mill engine boilers from steel for Platt Bros, Oldham. He solved the problems of using this new material, and by his death had made c.2,800 steel boilers with pressures up to 250 psi (17.6 kg/cm2).
    He was a pioneer in the general introduction of steel and in 1863–4 was a partner in establishing the Yorkshire Iron and Steel Works at Penistone. This was the first works to depend entirely upon Bessemer steel for engineering purposes and was later sold at a large profit to Charles Cammell \& Co., Sheffield. When he started this works, he also patented improvements both to the Bessemer converters and to the engines which provided their blast. In 1870 he helped to turn Lincolnshire into an important ironmaking area by erecting the North Lincolnshire Ironworks. He was also a shareholder in ironworks in South Wales and Cumberland.
    He contributed to the development of the stationary steam engine, for as early as 1855 he built one to run with a pressure of 150 psi (10.5 kg/cm) that worked quite satisfactorily. He reheated the steam between the cylinders of compound engines and then in 1861–2 patented a triple-expansion engine, followed in 1873 by a quadruple-expansion one to further economize steam. In 1858 he developed improved machinery for testing tensile strength and compressive resistance of materials, and in the same year patents for hydraulic lifting jacks and riveting machines were obtained.
    He was a founding member of the Iron and Steel Institute and became its President in 1888 when it visited Manchester. The previous year he had been President of the Institution of Civil Engineers when he was presented with the Bessemer Gold Medal. He was a constant contributor at the meetings of these associations as well as those of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. He did not live to see the opening of one of his final achievements, the Manchester Ship Canal. He was the one man who, by his indomitable energy and skill at public speaking, roused the enthusiasm of the people in Manchester for this project and he made it a really practical proposition in the face of strong opposition.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, Institution of Civil Engineers 1887.
    President, Iron and Steel Institute 1888. Institution of Civil Engineers Bessemer Gold Medal 1887.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, Engineer 69:56.
    Obituary, Engineering 49:66–8.
    H.W.Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (provides an illustration of Adamson's flanged seam for boilers).
    R.L.Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (covers the development of the triple-expansion engine).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Adamson, Daniel

  • 17 Page, Charles Grafton

    [br]
    b. 25 January 1812 Salem, Massachusetts, USA
    d. 5 May 1868 Washington, DC, USA
    [br]
    American scientist and inventor of electric motors.
    [br]
    Page graduated from Harvard in 1832 and subsequently attended Boston Medical School. He began to practise in Salem and also engaged in experimental research in electricity, discovering the improvement effected by substituting bundles of iron wire for solid bars in induction coils. He also created a device which he termed a Dynamic Multiplier, the prototype of the auto-transformer. Following a period in medical practice in Virginia, in 1841 he became one of the first two principal examiners in the United States Patent Office. He also held the Chair of Chemistry and Pharmacy at Columbian College, later George Washington University, between 1844 and 1849.
    A prolific inventor, Page completed several large electric motors in which reciprocating action was converted to rotary motion, and invested an extravagant sum of public money in a foredoomed effort to develop a 10-ton electric locomotive powered by primary batteries. This was unsuccessfully demonstrated in April 1851 on the Washington-Baltimore railway and seriously damaged his reputation. Page approached Thomas Davenport with an offer of partnership, but Davenport refused.
    After leaving the Patent Office in 1852 he became a patentee himself and advocated the reform of the patent procedures. Page returned to the Patent Office in 1861, and later persuaded Congress to pass a special Act permitting him to patent the induction coil. This was the cause, after his death, of protracted and widely publicized litigation.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1867, History of Induction: The American Claim to the Induction Coil and its
    Electrostatic Developments, Washington, DC.
    Further Reading
    R.C.Post, 1976, Physics, Patents and Politics, New York (a biography which treats Page as a focal point for studying the American patent system).
    ——1976, "Stray sparks from the induction coil: the Volta prize and the Page patent", Proceedings of the Institute of Electrical Engineers 64: 1,279–86 (a short account).
    W.J.King, 1962, The Development of Electrical Technology in the 19th Century, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, Paper 28.
    GW

    Biographical history of technology > Page, Charles Grafton

  • 18 Pattinson, Hugh Lee

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 25 December 1796 Alston, Cumberland, England
    d. 11 November 1858 Scot's House, Gateshead, England
    [br]
    English inventor of a silver-extraction process.
    [br]
    Born into a Quaker family, he was educated at private schools; his studies included electricity and chemistry, with a bias towards metallurgy. Around 1821 Pattinson became Clerk and Assistant to Anthony Clapham, a soap-boiler of Newcastle upon Tyne. In 1825 he secured appointment as Assay Master to the lords of the manor of Alston. There he was able to pursue the subject of special interest to him, and in January 1829 he devised a method of separating silver from lead ore; however, he was prevented from developing it because of a lack of funds.
    Two years later he was appointed Manager of Wentworth Beaumont's lead-works. There he was able to continue his researches, which culminated in the patent of 1833 enshrining the invention by which he is best known: a new process for extracting silver from lead by skimming crystals of pure lead with a perforated ladle from the surface of the molten silver-bearing lead, contained in a succession of cast-iron pots. The molten metal was stirred as it cooled until one pot provided a metal containing 300 oz. of silver to the ton (8,370 g to the tonne). Until that time, it was unprofitable to extract silver from lead ores containing less than 8 oz. per ton (223 g per tonne), but the Pattinson process reduced that to 2–3 oz. (56–84 g per tonne), and it therefore won wide acceptance. Pattinson resigned his post and went into partnership to establish a chemical works near Gateshead. He was able to devise two further processes of importance, one an improved method of obtaining white lead and the other a new process for manufacturing magnesia alba, or basic carbonate of magnesium. Both processes were patented in 1841.
    Pattinson retired in 1858 and devoted himself to the study of astronomy, aided by a 7½ in. (19 cm) equatorial telescope that he had erected at his home at Scot's House.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Vice-President, British Association Chemical Section 1838. Fellow of the Geological Society, Royal Astronomical Society and Royal Society 1852.
    Bibliography
    Pattinson wrote eight scientific papers, mainly on mining, listed in Royal Society Catalogue of Scientific Papers, most of which appeared in the Philosophical
    Magazine.
    Further Reading
    J.Percy, Metallurgy (volume on lead): 121–44 (fully describes Pattinson's desilvering process).
    Lonsdale, 1873, Worthies of Cumberland, pp. 273–320 (contains details of his life). T.K.Derry and T.I.Williams, 1960, A Short History ofTechnology, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Pattinson, Hugh Lee

  • 19 Whipple, Squire

    SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering
    [br]
    b. 1804 Hardwick, Massachusetts, USA
    d. 15 March 1888 Albany, New York, USA
    [br]
    American civil engineer, author and inventor.
    [br]
    The son of James and Electa Whipple, his father was a farmer and later the owner of a small cotton mil at Hardwick, Massachusetts. In 1817 Squire Whipple moved with his family to Otego County, New York. He helped on the farm and attended the academy at Fairfield, Herkimer County. For a time he taught school pupils, and in 1829 he entered Union College, Schenectady, where he received the degree of AB in 1830; his interest in engineering was probably aroused by the construction of the Erie Canal near his home during his boyhood. He was first employed in a minor capacity in surveys for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and for the Erie Canal. In 1836–7 he was resident engineer for a division of the New York and Erie Railroad and was also employed in a number of other railroad and canal surveys, making surveying instruments in the intervals between these appointments; in 1840, he completed a lock for weighing canal boats.
    Whipple received his first bridge patent on 24 April 1841; this was for a truss of arched upper chord made of cast and wrought iron. Five years later, he devised a trapezoidal truss which was used in the building of many bridges over the succeeding generation. In 1852–3 Whipple used his truss in an iron railroad bridge of 44.5 m (146 ft) span on the Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad. He also built a number of bridges with lifting spans.
    Whipple's main contribution to bridge engineering was the publication in 1847 of A Work on Bridge Building. In 1869 he issued a continuation of this treatise, and a fourth edition of both was published in 1883.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Honorary Member, American Society of Civil Engineers.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Whipple, Squire

См. также в других словарях:

  • 1841 год в истории железнодорожного транспорта — 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 Портал:Железнодорожный транспорт См. также: Другие события в 1841 году …   Википедия

  • 1852 год в истории железнодорожного транспорта — 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 Портал:Железнодорожный транспорт См. также: Другие события в 1852 году …   Википедия

  • 1841 год в литературе — Годы в литературе XIX века. 1841 год в литературе. 1796 • 1797 • 1798 • 1799 • 1800 ← XVIII век 1801 • 1802 • 1803 • 1804 • 1805 • 1806 • 1807 • 1808 • 1809 • 1810 1811 • 1812 • 1813 • 1814 • 1815 • 1816 • 1817 …   Википедия

  • 1852 год в литературе — Годы в литературе XIX века. 1852 год в литературе. 1796 • 1797 • 1798 • 1799 • 1800 ← XVIII век 1801 • 1802 • 1803 • 1804 • 1805 • 1806 • 1807 • 1808 • 1809 • 1810 1811 • 1812 • 1813 • 1814 • 1815 • 1816 • 1817 …   Википедия

  • 1852 год — Годы 1848 · 1849 · 1850 · 1851 1852 1853 · 1854 · 1855 · 1856 Десятилетия 1830 е · 1840 е 1850 е 1860 е · …   Википедия

  • 1841 год — Годы 1837 · 1838 · 1839 · 1840 1841 1842 · 1843 · 1844 · 1845 Десятилетия 1820 е · 1830 е 1840 е 1850 е · 1860 е …   Википедия

  • 1852 dans les chemins de fer — Années : 1849 1850 1851  1852  1853 1854 1855 Décennies : 1820 1830 1840  1850  1860 1870 1880 Siècles : XVIIIe siècle  XIXe si …   Wikipédia en Français

  • 1852 en droit — Chronologie en droit <= 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 => Janvier | Février | Mars | Avril | Mai | Juin | Juillet | Août | Septembre | Octobre | …   Wikipédia en Français

  • 1841 en droit — Chronologie en droit <= 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 => Janvier | Février | Mars | Avril | Mai | Juin | Juillet | Août | Septembre | Octobre | …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Liste der Staatsoberhäupter 1841 — Übersicht ◄◄ | ◄ | 1837 | 1838 | 1839 | 1840 | Liste der Staatsoberhäupter 1841 | 1842 | 1843 | 1844 | 1845 | ► | ►► Weitere Ereignisse Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Afrika …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 25 de Mayo (1841) — Para otros buques con el mismo nombre, véase ARA 25 de Mayo. 25 de Mayo Banderas Historial …   Wikipedia Español

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