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1 Society for Pure English
Общая лексика: Общество содействия чистоте английского языкаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > Society for Pure English
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2 SPE
1) Общая лексика: компания специального назн (special purpose entity, (synonym) special purpose vehicle - компания, специально созданная для проведения одной трансакции (либо серии трансакций), обычно в целях оптимизации налогообложения), НПП (научно-производственное предприятие; Sientific and Production Enterprise)2) Компьютерная техника: Software Port Entity, Special Purpose Entity3) Медицина: электрофорез протеина сыворотки, электрофорез сывороточных белков, serum protein electrophoresis, source plasma establishment4) Американизм: Service Procurement Engineering5) Военный термин: School of Preliminary Education, Seattle port of embarkation, signal processing electronics, special-purpose equipment, spherical probable error, system performance evaluation6) Техника: signal processing element, software performance engineering, system performance effectiveness7) Сельское хозяйство: specific-pathogen-free8) Фармакология: (Supercritical Fluid Extraction) СФЭ (Сверхкритическая флюидная экстракция)9) Финансы: (special purpose vehicle) юридическое лицо специального назначения10) Оптика: solar proton event11) Телекоммуникации: Synchronous Payload Envelope, Synchronous Payload Envelope (SONET)12) Сокращение: Society for Pure English, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Solid Phase Extraction, (син.) SPV13) Вычислительная техника: Symbolic Programming Environment, System Policy Editor14) Нефть: shallower pool extension, Society of Petroleum Engineers (AIME), общество инженеров-нефтяников (США; Society of Petroleum Engineers)15) Иммунология: streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin16) Деловая лексика: Semiconductor Product Equipment17) Бурение: Общество инженеров-нефтяников Американского института горных инженеров (Society of Petroleum Engineers)18) Образование: Student Program Element19) Недвижимость: специальная проектная компания, специальное юридическое лицо, целевая компания20) Микроэлектроника: Secure PIN Entry (часть стандарта PC/SC 2.0 по безопасной передаче PIN-кода), безопасный ввод PIN-кода21) Сетевые технологии: Service Processing Element22) Полимеры: Society of Plastics Engineers23) Химическое оружие: Source of pollutant emissions -
3 S.P.E.
abbreviation -
4 Perkin, Sir William Henry
[br]b. 12 March 1838 London, Englandd. 14 July 1907 Sudbury, England[br]English chemist, discoverer of aniline dyes, the first synthetic dyestuffs.[br]He early showed an aptitude for chemistry and in 1853 entered the Royal College of Chemistry as a student under A.W.von Hofmann, the first Professor at the College. By the end of his first year, he had carried out his first piece of chemical research, on the action of cyanogen chloride on phenylamine, which he published in the Journal of the Chemical Society (1857). He became honorary assistant to von Hofmann in 1857; three years previously he had set up his own chemical laboratory at home, where he had discovered the first of the azo dyes, aminoazonapththalene. In 1856 Perkin began work on the synthesis of quinine by oxidizing a salt of allyl toluidine with potassium dichromate. Substituting aniline, he obtained a dark-coloured precipitate which proved to possess dyeing properties: Perkin had discovered the first aniline dye. Upon receiving favourable reports on the new material from manufacturers of dyestuffs, especially Pullars of Perth, Perkin resigned from the College and turned to the commercial exploitation of his discovery. This proved highly successful. From 1858, the dye was manufactured at his Greenford Green works as "Aniline Purple" or "Tyrian Purple". It was later to be referred to by the French as mauve. Perkin's discovery led to the development of the modern dyestuffs industry, supplanting dyes from the traditional vegetable sources. In 1869, he introduced two new methods for making the red dye alizarin, in place of the process that involved the use of the madder plant (Rubia tinctorum). In spite of German competition, he dominated the British market until the end of 1873. After eighteen years in chemical industry, Perkin retired and devoted himself entirely to the pure chemical research which he had been pursuing since the 1850s. He eventually contributed ninety papers to the Chemical Society and further papers to other bodies, including the Royal Society. For example, in 1867 he published his synthesis of unsaturated organic acids, known as "Perkin's synthesis". Other papers followed, on the structure of "Aniline Purple". In 1881 Perkin drew attention to the magnetic-rotatory power of some of the substances he had been dealing with. From then on, he devoted particular attention to the application of this phenomenon to the determination of chemical structure.Perkin won wide recognition for his discoveries and other contributions to chemistry.The half-centenary of his great discovery was celebrated in July 1906 and later that year he received a knighthood.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1906. FRS 1866. President, Chemical Society 1883–5. President, Society of Chemical Industry 1884–5. Royal Society Royal Medal 1879; Davy Medal 1889.Bibliography26 August 1856, British patent no. 1984 (Aniline Purple).1867, "The action of acetic anhydride upon the hydrides of salicyl, etc.", Journal of the Chemical Society 20:586 (the first description of Perkin's synthesis).Further ReadingS.M.Edelstein, 1961, biography in Great Chemists, ed. E.Farber, New York: Interscience, pp. 757–72 (a reliable, short account).R.Meldola, 1908, Journal of the Chemical Society 93:2,214–57 (the most detailed account).LRDBiographical history of technology > Perkin, Sir William Henry
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5 cream
kri:m
1. noun1) (the yellowish-white oily substance that forms on the top of milk, and from which butter and cheese are made.) nata2) (any of many substances made of, or similar to, cream: ice-cream; face-cream.) crema3) (the best part; the top people: the cream of the medical profession.) la crema, la flor y nata4) ((also adjective) (of) a yellowish-white colour: cream paint.) crema
2. verb1) (to make into a cream-like mixture: Cream the eggs, butter and sugar together.) batir2) (to take the cream off: She creamed the milk.) desnatar, descremar3) ((with off) to select (the best): The best pupils will be creamed off for special training.) seleccionar (a)los mejores, cribar•- creamy- creaminess
- cream of tartar
cream1 adj de color cremacream2 n1. nata2. crema / pomadatr[kriːm]1 (of milk) nata, crema (de leche)2 (cosmetic) crema; (medical) pomada, crema3 (colour) color nombre masculino crema1 crema, (de) color crema1 SMALLCOOKERY/SMALL (beat) batir1 figurative use la crema, la flor y nata\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLcream cheese queso cremoso, queso para untarcream cracker galleta saladacream of... soup crema de...creamed potatoes puré nombre masculino de patatascream tea SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL merienda (consistente en té con bollos, pastelitos, mermelada y nada montada)hand cream crema para las manossuntan cream bronceador nombre masculinowhipped cream nata montadacream ['kri:m] vt1) beat, mix: batir, mezclar (azúcar y mantequilla, etc.)2) : preparar (alimentos) con cremacream n1) : crema f (de leche)2) lotion: crema f, loción f3) elite: crema f, elite fthe cream of the crop: la crema y nata, lo mejorn.• crema s.f.• nata s.f.• yema s.f.v.• desnatar v.• poner crema en v.
I kriːm1) ( Culin) crema f (de leche) (esp AmL), nata f (Esp)light o (BrE) single cream — crema líquida (AmL), nata líquida (Esp)
heavy o (BrE) double cream — crema doble (AmL), doble crema (Méx), nata para montar (Esp)
whipped cream — crema batida (AmL), nata montada (Esp)
cream of mushroom soup — crema f de champiñones; (before n)
cream tea — ( in UK) té servido con scones, mermelada y crema batida
2) c u ( lotion) crema f3) u ( elite)the cream of society — la flor y nata or la crema de la sociedad
4) ( color) color m crema
II
adjective color crema adj inv
III
transitive verb \<\<butter/sugar\>\> batir ( hasta obtener una consistencia cremosa)creamed potatoes — puré m de papas or (Esp) patatas
Phrasal Verbs:[kriːm]1. Ncream of tartar — crémor m tártaro
cream of tomato soup — sopa f de crema de tomate
double 6., single 3., whippedcream of wheat — (US) sémola f
2) (fig) flor f y nata, crema f3) (=lotion) (for face, shoes etc) crema f, pomada fshoe cream — betún m
face cream — crema f para la cara
2. ADJ1) (=cream-coloured) color crema inv2) (=made with cream) de nata or (LAm) crema3. VT1) [+ milk] desnatar, descremar (LAm); [+ butter] batir2) (also: cream together) (=mix) batircreamed potatoes — puré msing de patatas or (LAm) papas
3) (US) ** [+ enemy, opposing team] arrollar, aplastar4)to cream one's pants *** — correrse sin querer ***
4.CPDcream cake N — pastel m de nata or (LAm) crema
cream cheese N — queso m crema
cream cracker N — galleta f de soda
cream puff N — petisú m, pastel m de nata or (LAm) crema
cream soda N — gaseosa f de vainilla
cream tea N — (Brit) merienda en cafetería que suele constar de té, bollos, mermelada y nata
* * *
I [kriːm]1) ( Culin) crema f (de leche) (esp AmL), nata f (Esp)light o (BrE) single cream — crema líquida (AmL), nata líquida (Esp)
heavy o (BrE) double cream — crema doble (AmL), doble crema (Méx), nata para montar (Esp)
whipped cream — crema batida (AmL), nata montada (Esp)
cream of mushroom soup — crema f de champiñones; (before n)
cream tea — ( in UK) té servido con scones, mermelada y crema batida
2) c u ( lotion) crema f3) u ( elite)the cream of society — la flor y nata or la crema de la sociedad
4) ( color) color m crema
II
adjective color crema adj inv
III
transitive verb \<\<butter/sugar\>\> batir ( hasta obtener una consistencia cremosa)creamed potatoes — puré m de papas or (Esp) patatas
Phrasal Verbs: -
6 test
test
1. сущ.
1) а) проверка, испытание;
тест to administer, conduct, give a test ≈ проводить испытание my dad was put to test ≈ моего папу подвергли испытанию to take a test ≈ проходить испытание the banning of nuclear tests ≈ запрещение испытаний ядерного оружия our product will stand the test of time ≈ наша разработка выдержит испытание временем demanding test difficult test easy test exhaustive tests extensive tests loyalty test means test road test service test thorough tests test run б) псих. тест achievement test aptitude test free-association test intelligence test lie-detector test personality test psychological test
2) проверочная, контрольная работа;
тест (в школе, университете и т. д.;
по какому-л. предмету in, on) a test in French ≈ контрольная работа по английскому языку to draw up, make up, set a test брит. ≈ составлять контрольную, тест to bear, pass the test ≈ выдержать испытание to fail a test ≈ не выдерживать испытание Out of a total of 2,600 pupils only 920 passed the test. ≈ Из общего числа в 2600 учеников испытание выдержали только
920. She had sold her bike, taken a driving test and bought a car. ≈ Она продала свой велосипед, прошла экзамен на вождение автомобиля и купила себе машину. minimum competency test multiple-choice test proficiency test
3) доказательство;
критерий (некоторой проверки и т. п.) It is a commonplace fact that holidays are a major test of any relationship. ≈ Общеизвестно, что отдых и развлечения являются основным мерилом любых взаимоотношений. The test of any civilised society is how it treats its minorities. ≈ Доказательством цивилизованности любого общества является то, как в нем обращаются с национальными меньшинствами. Syn: standard
4) мед.;
хим. исследование, анализ;
проверка (for;
on) to carry out, conduct, do, run a test ≈ проводить, делать анализ to do a skin test for tuberculosis ≈ делать кожную пробу на туберкулез a test for the amount of butter in milk ≈ определение жирности молока They conducted a series of tests on me at the health center. ≈ В медицинском центре у меня взяли анализы. The family doctor ordered numerous, expensive medical tests, which revealed no physical problem. ≈ Семейный врач велел сделать массу дорогостоящих медицинских анализов, которые ничего не дали. blood test blood sedimentation test diagnostic test endurance test laboratory test litmus test Pap test patch test paternity test saliva test skin test tuberculin test visual test
5) хим. реактив
2. гл.
1) подвергать испытанию, проверке to test smb.'s eyesight ≈ проверять чье-л. зрение;
спорт to test the apparatus ≈ опробовать снаряд
2) тестировать, проверять с помощью тестов;
экзаменовать to test a class in algebra ≈ дать классу контрольную по алгебре
3) проверять, убеждаться
4) а) производить опыты б) обнаруживать определенные свойства в результате испытаний the water tested pure ≈ вода на поверку оказалась чистой
5) хим. подвергать действию реактива;
брать пробу ∙ test for test out
3. прил. испытательный, пробный, контрольный, проверочный test station ≈ контрольная станция test match ≈ контрольная игра (перед ответственными соревнованиями) испытание;
проба, проверка;
опробование - nuclear *s ядерые испытания - strength * автономное испытание( отдельного агрегата) - on-line * комплексное испытание (всей линии и т. п.) - preoperational * предпусковое испытание - engineering evaluation *s технические испытания - field * полевое испытание;
испытание в эксплуатационных условиях - bench * заводские испытания, испытания в заводских условиях - control * контрольные испытания - acceptance * приемочные испытания - roof * рабочие испытания - road * дорожные испытания - standard * типовое испытание - distance * (спортивное) конный пробег - * of patience испытание терпения - * for colour blindness проверка способности различать цвета - * by experiment проверка на опыте, опытная проверка - under * испытываемый, испытуемый - * data данные испытаний, эмпирические данные - * flight (авиация) испытательный полет - * specimen опытный образец - * pattern( специальное) испытательная таблица - to pass a * пройти испытания или проверку, подвергнуться проверке - to put smb. to the * подвергать кого-л. испытания - to stand the * выдерживать испытание мерило, пробный камень;
серьезное испытание;
критерий - a severe * of character серьезное испытание характера - as a * of his sincerity как доказательство его чистосердечности - it is excluded by our * это не отвечает нашим требованиям - absence is a real * of love разлука - пробный камень для любви - his writing has stood the * of time его творчество выдержало проверку временем проверочная или контрольная работа;
экзамен - *in arithmetic контрольная работа по арифметике - to give smb. a * дать кому-л. контрольную работу (психологическое) тест - to submit smb. to a * подвергнуть кого-л. тесту, дать тест кому-л. (химическое) исследование, анализ;
опыт, проба, реакция - blood * анализ крови, иссследование крови - * object объект анализа - * for starch анализ на содержание крахмала - to run a saliva * cделать анализ слюны пробирная чашка( химическое) реактив для тестов сокр. от test-match (религия) отречение от признания папской власти и догмата пресуществления подвергать испытанию;
испытывать, проверять;
опробовать - to * smb.'s eyesight проверять чье-л. зрение - to * ore for gold определять содержание золота в руде - to * the apparatus (спортивное) опробовать снаряд - to * eggs просвечивать яйца быть мерилом - the battle *ed the loyalty of his troops эта битва стала мерилом лояльности его армии - it *s your stamina to the full это настоящая проверка вашей стойкости проверять, убеждаться - he wanted to * whether a small group of specialists could show greater productivity он хотел проверить, сможет ли небольшая группа специалистов поднять производительность труда( for) пробоваться( на роль) обнаруживать определенные свойства в результате испытаний - the water *ed pure вода на поверку оказалась чистой - the car *ed good on the highway на автостраде машина показала хорошие ходовые качества тестировать, проверять с помощью тестов - to * a child for comprehension тестировать способность понимакния у ребенка экзаменовать;
давать контрольную работу - to * a class in algebra дать классу контрольную по алгебре (химическое) подвергать действию реактива (химическое) производить опыты (химическое) брать пробу (зоология) панцирь;
щит;
скорлупа (ботаника) теста, семенная кожура (юридическое) официально подтверждать acceptance ~ произ. приемочные испытания aptitude ~ испытание на пригодность aptitude ~ проверка способности;
проверка пригодности (например, к выполнению конкретной работы) aptitude ~ проверка способности asymptotic ~ вчт. асимптотический критерий asymptotical ~ вчт. асимптотический критерий basic ~ базовый тест ~ испытание;
to put to test подвергать испытанию;
to bear the test выдержать испытание;
to stand the test of time выдержать испытание временем bench ~ лабораторное испытание benchmark ~ эталонный тест benchmark ~ вчт. эталонный тест beta ~ вчт. опытная эксплуатация blind product ~ скрытая проверка изделия block voucher ~ рев. проверка блока оправдательных документов check ~ контрольные испытания check ~ проверочные испытания chi-square ~ критерий хи-квадрат compliance ~ проверка соответствия concept ~ проверка концепции изделия convergence ~ признак сходимости count ~ контроль подсчетом deceit ~ проверка на детекторе лжи driver's ~ экзамен на вождение автомобиля driving ~ дорожные испытания driving ~ эксплуатационные испытания factorial ~ стат. факторный эксперимент film ~ кинопроба будущего исполнителя роли flight ~ летное испытание general operating ~ общие испытания в условиях эксплуатации graphic ~ графическая проверка handover ~ пробная поставка inspection ~ входной контроль leg ~ вчт. тестирование ветвей link ~ вчт. испытание связей logical ~ логический контроль longevity ~ ресурсные испытания loop ~ вчт. проверка конца цикла mail ~ почтовая проверка популярности товара material ~ испытания материалов maximin ~ максиминный критерий median ~ критерий основанный на медиане model ~ испытания модели needs ~ проверка потребностей nonparametric ~ непараметрический критерий nonrandomized ~ нерандомизированный критерий normal curve ~ проверка кривой нормального распределения objective ~ объективный критерий odd ~ выборочное испытание offer ~ проверка предложения one-sided ~ односторонний критерий one-tailed ~ односторонний критерий optimality ~ критерий оптимальности package ~ рекламная проверка paternity blood ~ анализ крови для установления отцовства path ~ вчт. тестирование ветвей performance ~ тестирование эффективности;
проверка производительности post ~ повторная проверка probability-ratio ~ критерий отношения вероятностей program ~ вчт. проверка программы ~ испытание;
to put to test подвергать испытанию;
to bear the test выдержать испытание;
to stand the test of time выдержать испытание временем quality ~ контроль качества quality ~ проверка качества random ~ стат. испытание по случайной схеме randomized ~ рандомизированный критерий rank ~ ранговый критерий sales effectiveness ~ проверка эффективности сбыта sample ~ выборочный контроль sample ~ исследование выборки sign ~ вчт. проверка знака significance ~ критерий значимости single-tail ~ односторонний критерий single-tailed ~ односторонний критерий skill ~ проверка квалификации split-run ~ проверка рекламы с разбивкой тиража для размещения различных объявлений spot ~ проверка на месте ~ испытание;
to put to test подвергать испытанию;
to bear the test выдержать испытание;
to stand the test of time выдержать испытание временем static ~ вчт. статическая проверка status ~ вчт. проверка состояния suppression ~ вчт. проверка блокировки system ~ вчт. испытание системы test анализ ~ испытание, проверка, тест ~ испытание;
to put to test подвергать испытанию;
to bear the test выдержать испытание;
to stand the test of time выдержать испытание временем ~ испытание ~ испытывать ~ мед., хим. исследование, анализ;
проверка;
a test for the amount of butter in milk определение жирности молока ~ исследование ~ исследовать ~ контрольная работа ~ критерий ~ мерило;
критерий ~ мерило ~ опробовать ~ официально подтверждать ~ хим. подвергать действию реактива ~ подвергать испытанию, проверке ~ показатель ~ проба ~ проверка ~ проверочная, контрольная работа;
a test in English контрольная работа по английскому языку ~ проверять ~ проводить анализ ~ проводить испытания ~ производить опыты ~ хим. реактив ~ психол. тест ~ тест ~ экзамен ~ attr. испытательный, пробный;
контрольный, проверочный;
test station контрольная станция ~ for preference вчт. критерий предпочтения ~ мед., хим. исследование, анализ;
проверка;
a test for the amount of butter in milk определение жирности молока ~ in court засвидетельствовать в суде ~ проверочная, контрольная работа;
a test in English контрольная работа по английскому языку ~ of goodness of fit критерий согласия ~ of linearity критерий линейности ~ of randomness критерий случайности ~ attr. испытательный, пробный;
контрольный, проверочный;
test station контрольная станция two-sample ~ двухвыборочный критерий unbiased ~ несмещенный критерий volume ~ вчт. нагрузочные испытания word association ~ тест на словесную ассоциацию written ~ письменная контрольная работа written ~ письменный тест -
7 Mond, Ludwig
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 7 March 1839 Cassel, Germanyd. 11 December 1909 London, England[br]German (naturalized English) industrial chemist.[br]Born into a prosperous Jewish merchant family, Mond studied at the Polytechnic in Cassel and then under the distinguished chemists Hermann Kolbe at Marburg and Bunsen at Heidelberg from 1856. In 1859 he began work as an industrial chemist in various works in Germany and Holland. At this time, Mond was pursuing his method for recovering sulphur from the alkali wastes in the Leblanc soda-making process. Mond came to England in 1862 and five years later settled permanently, in partnership with John Hutchinson \& Co. at Widnes, to perfect his process, although complete success eluded him. He became a naturalized British subject in 1880.In 1872 Mond became acquainted with Ernest Solvay, the Belgian chemist who developed the ammonia-soda process which finally supplanted the Leblanc process. Mond negotiated the English patent rights and set up the first ammoniasoda plant in England at Winnington in Cheshire, in partnership with John Brunner. After overcoming many difficulties by incessant hard work, the process became a financial success and in 1881 Brunner, Mond \& Co. was formed, for a time the largest alkali works in the world. In 1926 the company merged with others to form Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd (ICI). The firm was one of the first to adopt the eight-hour day and to provide model dwellings and playing fields for its employees.From 1879 Mond took up the production of ammonia and this led to the Mond producer-gas plant, patented in 1883. The process consisted of passing air and steam over coal and coke at a carefully regulated temperature. Ammonia was generated and, at the same time, so was a cheap and useful producer gas. Mond's major discovery followed the observation in 1889 that carbon monoxide could combine with nickel in its ore at around 60°C to form a gaseous compound, nickel carbonyl. This, on heating to a higher temperature, would then decompose to give pure nickel. Mond followed up this unusual way of producing and purifying a metal and by 1892 had succeeded in setting up a pilot plant to perfect a large-scale process and went on to form the Mond Nickel Company.Apart from being a successful industrialist, Mond was prominent in scientific circles and played a leading role in the setting up of the Society of Chemical Industry in 1881. The success of his operations earned him great wealth, much of which he donated for learned and charitable purposes. He formed a notable collection of pictures which he bequeathed to the National Gallery.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1891.Bibliography1885, "On the origin of the ammonia-soda process", Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry 4:527–9.1895. "The history of the process of nickel extraction", Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry 14:945–6.Further ReadingJ.M.Cohen, 1956, The Life of Ludwig Mond, London: Methuen. Obituary, 1918, Journal of the Chemical Society 113:318–34.F.C.Donnan, 1939, Ludwig Mond 1839–1909, London (a valuable lecture).LRD -
8 _різне
aim at the stars, but keep your feet on the ground all are not thieves that dogs bark at all cats are grey in the dark all roads lead to Rome always lend a helping hand among the blind the one-eyed man is king as the days grow longer, the storms are stronger at a round table, there is no dispute of place a bad excuse is better than none a bad vessel is seldom broken be just before you're generous be just to all, but trust not all the best things come in small packages the best way to resist temptation is to give in to it better alone than in bad company better an empty house than a bad tenant better be the head of a dog than the tail of a lion better ride an ass that carries me than a horse that throws me better to beg than to steal, but better to work than to beg better a tooth out than always aching between two stools one goes to the ground a bird may be known by its flight a bird never flew on one wing a bit in the morning is better than nothing all day a bleating sheep loses a bite a blind man would be glad to see a blind man needs no looking glass bread always falls buttered side down a burden which one chooses is not felt butter to butter is no relish cast no dirt in the well that gives you water the chain is no stronger than its weakest link a change is as good as a rest Christmas comes but once a year circumstances after cases cleanliness is next to godliness the cobbler's wife is the worst shod a cold hand, a warm heart comparisons are odious consistency is a jewel consideration is half of conversation a creaking door hangs long on its hinges desperate diseases must have desperate remedies the devil looks after his own diamond cut diamond dirt shows the quickest on the cleanest cotton discontent is the first step in progress do as you would be done by dog does not eat dog a dog that will fetch a bone will carry a bone a dog will not cry if you beat him with a bone do not spoil the ship for a ha'porth of tar do not throw pearls before swine do your best and leave the rest with God do your duty and be afraid of none don't be a yes-man don't cut off your nose to spite your face don't drown yourself to save a drowning man don't look a gift horse in the mouth don't spur a willing horse don't strike a man when he is down don't swap the witch for the devil eagles don't catch flies eagles fly alone, but sheep flock together the English are a nation of shopkeepers even a stopped clock is right twice a day every cock sings in his own way every fish that escapes seems greater than it is every man is a pilot in a calm sea every medal has its reverse side every thing comes to a man who does not need it every tub smells of the wine it holds evil communications corrupt good manners the exception proves the rule exchange is no robbery extremes meet facts are stubborn things familiarity breeds contempt fast bind, fast find fields have eyes, and woods have ears fight fire with fire figure on the worst but hope for the best fingers were made before forks the fire which lights us at a distance will burn us when near the first shall be last and the last, first follow your own star forbearance is no acquittance the fox knows much, but more he that catches him from the day you were born till you ride in a hearse, there's nothing so bad but it might have been worse from the sweetest wine, the tartest vinegar fruit is golden in the morning, silver at noon, and lead at night gambling is the son of avarice and the father of despair the game is not worth the candles a gentleman never makes any noise the gift bringer always finds an open door the giver makes the gift precious a good horse cannot be of a bad colour a good tale is none the worse for being twice told good riddance to bad rubbish the greatest right in the world is the right to be wrong the half is more than the whole half a loaf is better than no bread half an orange tastes as sweet as a whole one hawk will not pick out hawk's eyes the heart has arguments with which the understanding is unacquainted he may well swim that is held up by the chin he that doesn't respect, isn't respected he that lies down with dogs must rise with fleas he that would live at peace and rest must hear and see and say the best he who is absent is always in the wrong he who follows is always behind the higher the climb, the broader the view history is a fable agreed upon hitch your wagon to a star the ideal we embrace is our better self if a bee didn't have a sting, he couldn't keep his honey if a sheep loops the dyke, all the rest will follow I fear Greeks even when bringing gifts if each would sweep before his own door, we should have a clean city if the cap fits, wear it if the mountain will not come to Mohammed, Mohammed must go to the mountain if you cannot bite, never show your teeth if you cannot have the best, make the best of what you have if you cannot speak well of a person, don't speak of him at all if you leave your umbrella at home, it is sure to rain if you wish to see the best in others, show the best of yourself ill news travels fast ill weeds grow apace an inch breaks no square it always pays to be a gentleman it costs nothing to ask it is easier to descend than ascend it is easier to pull down than to build up it is good fishing in troubled waters it is idle to swallow the cow and choke on the tail it is the last straw that breaks the camel's back it is sometimes best to burn your bridges behind you it is well to leave off playing when the game is at the best it is not clever to gamble, but to stop playing it's a small world it takes all sorts to make a world it takes a thief to catch a thief jealousy is a green-eyed monster jealousy is a proof of self-love keep a dress seven years and it will come back into style keep no more cats than will catch mice kindle not a fire that you cannot extinguish kissing goes by favor jam tomorrow and jam yesterday, but never jam today a joy that's shared is a joy made double justice is blind lay not the load on the lame horse learn to creep before you leap let the cock crow or not, the day will come the longest road is sometimes the shortest way home lookers-on see most of the game man does not live by bread alone many are called but few are chosen many go out for wool and come home shorn many stumble at a straw and leap over a block men cease to interest us when we find their limitations a misty morn may have a fine day the mob has many heads but no brains the moon is not seen when the sun shines the more the merrier mountain has brought forth a mouse much water runs by the mill that the miller knows not of name not a halter in his house that hanged himself the nearer the bone, the sweeter the meat never be the first by whom the new is tried nor yet the last to lay the old aside never do anything yourself you can get somebody else to do never is a long time never let your left hand know what your right hand is doing never make a bargain with the devil on a dark day never quarrel with your bread and butter never tell tales out of school a nod's as good as a wink to a blind horse no joy without alloy no man is a hero to his valet no mud can soil us but the mud we throw no names, no pack-drill no news good news no one but the wearer knows where the shoe pinches none is so blind as they who will not see none of us is perfect nothing is certain but the unforeseen nothing is easy to the unwilling nothing is so good but it might have been better nothing is stolen without hands nothing new under the sun nothing seems quite as good as new after being broken an old poacher makes the best keeper once is no rule one dog barks at nothing, the rest bark at him one good turn deserves another one half of the world does not know how the other half lives one hand washes the other one man's meat is another man's poison one picture is worth ten thousand words one volunteer is worth two pressed men one whip is good enough for a good horse; for a bad one, not a thousand opposites attract each other the orange that is squeezed too hard yields a bitter juice other people's burdens killed the ass out of the mire into the swamp painted flowers have no scent paper is patient: you can put anything on it people condemn what they do not understand pigs might fly the pitcher goes often to the well please ever; tease never plenty is no plague the porcupine, whom one must handle gloved, may be respected but is never loved the proof of the pudding is in the eating the remedy is worse than the disease reopen not the wounds once healed a rolling stone gathers no moss the rotten apple injures its neighbors scratch my back and I shall scratch yours the sea refuses no river seize what is highest and you will possess what is in between seldom seen, soon forgotten silence scandal by scandal the sharper the storm, the sooner it's over the sheep who talks peace with a wolf will soon be mutton since we cannot get what we like, let us like what we can get small faults indulged in are little thieves that let in greater solitude is at times the best society some people are too mean for heaven and too good for hell the soul of a man is a garden where, as he sows, so shall he reap sour grapes can never make sweet wine sow a thought and reap an act the sow loves bran better than roses a stick is quickly found to beat a dog with still waters run deep stoop low and it will save you many a bump through life a straw shows which way the wind blows a stream cannot rise above its source the style is the man the sun loses nothing by shining into a puddle the sun shines on all the world the sun will shine down our street too sunday plans never stand suspicion may be no fault, but showing it may be a great one sweetest nuts have the hardest shells the tail cannot shake the dog take things as they are, not as you'd have them tastes differ there are more ways of killing a dog than hanging it there is always room at the top there is life in the old dog yet there is no rose without a thorn there is small choice in rotten apples there is truth in wine there's as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it they need much whom nothing will content they that dance must pay the fiddler they walk with speed who walk alone those who hide can find three removals are as bad as a fire to the pure all things are pure to work hard, live hard, die hard, and go to hell after all would be hard indeed too far east is west translation is at best an echo a tree is known by its fruit a tree often transplanted neither grows nor thrives two can play at that game two dogs over one bone seldom agree venture a small fish to catch a great one the voice with a smile always wins wear my shoes and you'll know where they pitch we weep when we are born, not when we die what can you have of a cat but her skin what can't be cured must be endured what matters to a blind man that his father could see what you lose on the swings, you gain on the roundabouts when all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail when a dog is drowning, everyone offers him drink when in doubt, do nowt when interest is lost, memory is lost when a man lays the foundation of his own ruin, others will build on it when a river does not make a noise, it is either empty or very full when the devil is dead, he never lacks a chief mourner when two ride on one horse one must sit behind where bees are, there is honey where it is weakest, there the thread breaks who seeks what he should not finds what he would not why keep a dog and bark yourself? a wonder lasts but nine days the worth of a thing is best known by its want the world is a ladder for some to go up and some down would you persuade, speak of interest, not of reason you buy land, you buy stones; you buy meat, you buy bones you can take a horse to the water, but you cannot make him drink you can tell the day by the morning you cannot lose what you never had you cannot touch pitch and not be defiled you can't put new wine in old bottles you can't walk and look at the stars if you have a stone in your shoe your looking glass will tell you what none of your friends will zeal without knowledge is a runaway horse -
9 Pattinson, Hugh Lee
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 25 December 1796 Alston, Cumberland, Englandd. 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 DistinctionsVice-President, British Association Chemical Section 1838. Fellow of the Geological Society, Royal Astronomical Society and Royal Society 1852.BibliographyPattinson wrote eight scientific papers, mainly on mining, listed in Royal Society Catalogue of Scientific Papers, most of which appeared in the PhilosophicalMagazine.Further ReadingJ.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 -
10 Savery, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. c. 1650 probably Shilston, near Modbury, Devonshire, Englandd. c. 15 May 1715 London, England[br]English inventor of a partially successful steam-driven pump for raising water.[br]Little is known of the early years of Savery's life and no trace has been found that he served in the Army, so the title "Captain" is thought to refer to some mining appointment, probably in the West of England. He may have been involved in the Glorious Revolution of 1688, for later he was well known to William of Orange. From 1705 to 1714 he was Treasurer for Sick and Wounded Seamen, and in 1714 he was appointed Surveyor of the Water Works at Hampton Court, a post he held until his death the following year. He was interested in mechanical devices; amongst his early contrivances was a clock.He was the most prolific inventor of his day, applying for seven patents, including one in 1649, for polishing plate glass which may have been used. His idea for 1697 for propelling ships with paddle-wheels driven by a capstan was a failure, although regarded highly by the King, and was published in his first book, Navigation Improved (1698). He tried to patent a new type of floating mill in 1707, and an idea in 1710 for baking sea coal or other fuel in an oven to make it clean and pure.His most famous invention, however, was the one patented in 1698 "for raising water by the impellent force of fire" that Savery said would drain mines or low-lying land, raise water to supply towns or houses, and provide a source of water for turning mills through a water-wheel. Basically it consisted of a receiver which was first filled with steam and then cooled to create a vacuum by having water poured over the outside. The water to be pumped was drawn into the receiver from a lower sump, and then high-pressure steam was readmitted to force the water up a pipe to a higher level. It was demonstrated to the King and the Royal Society and achieved some success, for a few were installed in the London area and a manufactory set up at Salisbury Court in London. He published a book, The Miner's Friend, about his engine in 1702, but although he made considerable improvements, due to excessive fuel consumption and materials which could not withstand the steam pressures involved, no engines were installed in mines as Savery had hoped. His patent was extended in 1699 until 1733 so that it covered the atmospheric engine of Thomas Newcomen who was forced to join Savery and his other partners to construct this much more practical engine.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1706.Bibliography1698, Navigation Improved.1702, The Miner's Friend.Further ReadingThe entry in the Dictionary of National Biography (1897, Vol. L, London: Smith Elder \& Co.) has been partially superseded by more recent research. The Transactions of the Newcomen Society contain various papers; for example, Rhys Jenkins, 1922–3, "Savery, Newcomen and the early history of the steam engine", Vol. 3; A.Stowers, 1961–2, "Thomas Newcomen's first steam engine 250 years ago and the initial development of steam power", Vol. 34; A.Smith, 1977–8, "Steam and the city: the committee of proprietors of the invention for raising water by fire", 1715–1735, Vol. 49; and J.S.P.Buckland, 1977–8, "Thomas Savery, his steam engine workshop of 1702", Vol. 49. Brief accounts may be found in H.W. Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press, and R.L. Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press. There is another biography in T.I. Williams (ed.), 1969, A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists, London: A. \& C.Black.RLH -
11 Cookworthy, William
SUBJECT AREA: Domestic appliances and interiors[br]b. 1705 Kings bridge, Devon, Englandd. 16 October 1780 Plymouth, England[br]English pioneer of porcelain manufacture in England.[br]The family fortunes having been extinguished by the South Sea Bubble of 1720, Cookworthy and his brother had to fend for themselves. They set up, and succeeded, in the pharmacy trade. At the age of 31, however, William left the business, and after a period of probation he became a minister in the Society of Friends. In a letter of 5 May 1745, Cookworthy mentions some samples of kaolin and china or growan stone that had been brought to him from Virginia. He found similar materials at Treginning Hill in Cornwall, and between 1755 and 1758 he found sufficiently pure china clay and china stone to make a pure white porcelain. Cookworthy took out a patent for his discovery in 1768 which covered the manufacture of porcelain from moonstone or growan and growan clay, with a glaze made from china stone to which lime and fern ash or magnesia alba (basic carbonate of magnesium) were added. Cookworthy's experiments had been carried out on the property of Lord Camelford, who later assisted him, in the company of other Quakers, in setting up a works at Coxside, Plymouth, to manufacture the ware; the works employed between fifty and sixty people. In the absence of coal, Cookworthy resorted to wood as fuel, but this was scarce, so in 1770 he transferred his operation to Castle Green, Bristol. However, he had no greater success there, and in 1773 he sold the entire interest in porcelain manufacture to Richard Champion (1743–91), although Cookworthy and his heirs were to receive royalties for ninety-nine years. Champion, who had been working with Cookworthy since 1764 and was active in Bristol city affairs, continued the firm as Richard Champion \& Co., but when in 1775 Champion tried to renew Cookworthy's patent, Wedgwood and other Staffordshire potters challenged him. After litigation, the use of kaolin and china stone was thrown open to general use. The Staffordshire potters made good use of this new-found freedom and Champion was forced to sell the patent to them and dispose of his factory the following year. The potters of Staffordshire said of Cookworthy, "the greatest service ever conferred by one person on the pottery manufacturers is that of making them acquainted with china clay".[br]Further ReadingW.Harrison, 1854, Memoir of William Cookworthy by His Grandson, London. F.S.Mackenna, 1946, Cookworthy's Plymouth and Bristol Porcelain, Leigh on Sea: Lewis.A.D.Selleck, 1978, Cookworthy 1705–80 and his Circle, privately published.LRD -
12 Sopwith, Sir Thomas (Tommy) Octave Murdoch
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 18 January 1888 London, Englandd. 27 January 1989 Stockbridge, Hampshire, England[br]English aeronautical engineer and industrialist.[br]Son of a successful mining engineer, Sopwith did not shine at school and, having been turned down by the Royal Navy as a result, attended an engineering college. His first interest was motor cars and, while still in his teens, he set up a business in London with a friend in order to sell them; he also took part in races and rallies.Sopwith's interest in aviation came initially through ballooning, and in 1906 he purchased his own balloon. Four years later, inspired by the recent flights across the Channel to France and after a joy-ride at Brooklands, he bought an Avis monoplane, followed by a larger biplane, and taught himself to fly. He was awarded the Royal Aero Society's Aviator Certificate No. 31 on 21 November 1910, and he quickly distinguished himself in flying competitions on both sides of the Atlantic and started his own flying school. In his races he was ably supported by his friend Fred Sigrist, a former motor engineer. Among the people Sopwith taught to fly were an Australian, Harry Hawker, and Major Hugh Trenchard, who later became the "father" of the RAF.In 1912, depressed by the poor quality of the aircraft on trial for the British Army, Sopwith, in conjunction with Hawker and Sigrist, bought a skating rink in Kingston-upon-Thames and, assisted by Fred Sigrist, started to design and build his first aircraft, the Sopwith Hybrid. He sold this to the Royal Navy in 1913, and the following year his aviation manufacturing company became the Sopwith Aviation Company Ltd. That year a seaplane version of his Sopwith Tabloid won the Schneider Trophy in the second running of this speed competition. During 1914–18, Sopwith concentrated on producing fighters (or "scouts" as they were then called), with the Pup, the Camel, the 1½ Strutter, the Snipe and the Sopwith Triplane proving among the best in the war. He also pioneered several ideas to make flying easier for the pilot, and in 1915 he patented his adjustable tailplane and his 1 ½ Strutter was the first aircraft to be fitted with air brakes. During the four years of the First World War, Sopwith Aviation designed thirty-two different aircraft types and produced over 16,000 aircraft.The end of the First World War brought recession to the aircraft industry and in 1920 Sopwith, like many others, put his company into receivership; none the less, he immediately launched a new, smaller company with Hawker, Sigrist and V.W.Eyre, which they called the H.G. Hawker Engineering Company Ltd to avoid any confusion with the former company. He began by producing cars and motor cycles under licence, but was determined to resume aircraft production. He suffered an early blow with the death of Hawker in an air crash in 1921, but soon began supplying aircraft to the Royal Air Force again. In this he was much helped by taking on a new designer, Sydney Camm, in 1923, and during the next decade they produced a number of military aircraft types, of which the Hart light bomber and the Fury fighter, the first to exceed 200 mph (322 km/h), were the best known. In the mid-1930s Sopwith began to build a large aviation empire, acquiring first the Gloster Aircraft Company and then, in quick succession, Armstrong-Whitworth, Armstrong-Siddeley Motors Ltd and its aero-engine counterpart, and A.V.Roe, which produced Avro aircraft. Under the umbrella of the Hawker Siddeley Aircraft Company (set up in 1935) these companies produced a series of outstanding aircraft, ranging from the Hawker Hurricane, through the Avro Lancaster to the Gloster Meteor, Britain's first in-service jet aircraft, and the Hawker Typhoon, Tempest and Hunter. When Sopwith retired as Chairman of the Hawker Siddeley Group in 1963 at the age of 75, a prototype jump-jet (the P-1127) was being tested, later to become the Harrier, a for cry from the fragile biplanes of 1910.Sopwith also had a passion for yachting and came close to wresting the America's Cup from the USA in 1934 when sailing his yacht Endeavour, which incorporated a number of features years ahead of their time; his greatest regret was that he failed in his attempts to win this famous yachting trophy for Britain. After his retirement as Chairman of the Hawker Siddeley Group, he remained on the Board until 1978. The British aviation industry had been nationalized in April 1977, and Hawker Siddeley's aircraft interests merged with the British Aircraft Corporation to become British Aerospace (BAe). Nevertheless, by then the Group had built up a wide range of companies in the field of mechanical and electrical engineering, and its board conferred on Sopwith the title Founder and Life President.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1953. CBE 1918.Bibliography1961, "My first ten years in aviation", Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society (April) (a very informative and amusing paper).Further ReadingA.Bramson, 1990, Pure Luck: The Authorized Biography of Sir Thomas Sopwith, 1888– 1989, Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens.B.Robertson, 1970, Sopwith. The Man and His Aircraft, London (a detailed publication giving plans of all the Sopwith aircraft).CM / JDSBiographical history of technology > Sopwith, Sir Thomas (Tommy) Octave Murdoch
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13 Cort, Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1740 Lancaster, Englandd. 1800 Hampstead, near London, England[br]English ironmaster, inventor of the puddling process and grooved rollers for forming iron into bars.[br]His father was a mason and brickmaker but, anxious to improve himself, Cort set up in London in 1765 as a navy agent, said to have been a profitable business. He recognized that, at that time, the conversion of pig iron to malleable or wrought iron, which was needed in increasing quantities as developments in industry and mechanical engineering gathered pace, presented a bottleneck in the ironmaking process. The finery hearth was still in use, slow and inefficient and requiring the scarce charcoal as fuel. To tackle this problem, Cort gave up his business and acquired a furnace and slitting mill at Fontley, near Fareham in Hampshire. In 1784 he patented his puddling process, by which molten pig iron on the bed of a reverberatory furnace was stirred with an iron bar and, by the action of the flame and the oxygen in the air, the carbon in the pig iron was oxidized, leaving nearly pure iron, which could be forged to remove slag. In this type of furnace, the fuel and the molten iron were separated, so that the cheaper coal could be used as fuel. It was the stirring action with the iron bar that gave the name "puddling" to the process. Others had realized the problem and reached a similar solution, notably the brothers Thomas and George Cranage, but only Cort succeeded in developing a commercially viable process. The laborious hammering of the ball of iron thus produced was much reduced by an invention of the previous year, 1783. This too was patented. The iron was passed between grooved rollers to form it into bars. Cort entered into an agreement with Samuel Jellico to set up an ironworks at Gosport to exploit his inventions. Samuel's father Adam, Deputy Paymaster of the Navy, advanced capital for this venture, Cort having expended much of his own resources in the experimental work that preceded his inventions. However, it transpired that Jellico senior had, unknown to Cort, used public money to advance the capital; the Admiralty acted to recover the money and Cort lost heavily, including the benefits from his patents. Rival ironmasters were quick to pillage the patents. In 1790, and again the following year, Cort offered unsuccessfully to work for the military. Finally, in 1794, at the instigation of the Prime Minister, William Pitt the Younger, Cort was paid a pension of £200 per year in recognition of the value of his improvements in the technology of ironmaking, although this was reduced by deductions to £160. After his death, the pension to his widow was halved, while some of his children received a pittance. Without the advances made by Cort, however, the iron trade could not have met the rapidly increasing demand for iron during the industrial revolution.[br]Bibliography1787, A Brief State of Facts Relative to the New Method of Making Bar Iron with Raw Pit Coal and Grooved Rollers (held in the Science Museum Library archive collection).Further ReadingH.W.Dickinson, 1941, "Henry Cort's bicentary", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 21: 31–47 (there are further references to grooved rollers and the puddling process in Vol. 49 of the same periodical (1978), on pp. 153–8).R.A.Mott, 1983, Henry Con, the Great Finery Creator of Puddled Iron, Sheffield: Historical Metallurgy Society.LRD -
14 Bibliography
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15 Camm, Sir Sydney
[br]b. 5 August 1893 Windsor, Berkshire, Englandd. 12 March 1966 Richmond, Surrey, England[br]English military aircraft designer.[br]He was the eldest of twelve children and his father was a journeyman carpenter, in whose footsteps Camm followed as an apprentice woodworker. He developed an early interest in aircraft, becoming a keen model maker in his early teens and taking a major role in founding a local society to this end, and in 1912 he designed and built a glider able to carry people. During the First World War he worked as a draughtsman for the aircraft firm Martinsyde, but became increasingly involved in design matters as the war progressed. In 1923 Camm was recruited by Sopwith to join his Hawker Engineering Company as Senior Draughtsman, but within two years had risen to be Chief Designer. His first important contribution was to develop a method of producing metal aircraft, using welded steel tubes, and in 1926 he designed his first significant aircraft, the Hawker Horsley torpedo-bomber, which briefly held the world long-distance record before it was snatched by Charles Lindbergh in his epic New York-Paris flight in 1927. His Hawker Hart light bomber followed in 1928, after which came his Hawker Fury fighter.By the mid-1930s Camm's reputation as a designer was such that he was able to wield significant influence on the Air Ministry when Royal Air Force (RAF) aircraft specifications were being drawn up. His outstanding contribution came, however, with the unveiling of his Hawker Hurricane in 1935. This single-seater fighter was to prove one of the backbones of the RAF during 1939–45, but during the war he also designed two other excellent fighters: the Tempest and the Typhoon. After the Second World War Camm turned to jet aircraft, producing in 1951 the Hawker Hunter fighter/ground-attack aircraft, which saw lengthy service in the RAF and many other air forces. His most revolutionary contribution was the design of the Harrier jump-jet, beginning with the P.1127 prototype in 1961, followed by the Kestrel three years later. These were private ventures, but eventually the Government saw the enormous merit in the vertical take-off and landing concept, and the Harrier came to fruition in 1967. Sadly Camm, who was on the Board of Sopwith Hawker Siddeley Group, died before the aircraft came into service. He is permanently commemorated in the Camm Memorial Hall at the RAF Museum, Hendon, London.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCBE 1941. Knighted 1953. Associate Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society 1918, Fellow 1932, President 1954–5, Gold Medal 1958. Daniel Guggenheim Medal (USA) 1965.Further ReadingAlan Bramson, 1990, Pure Luck: The Authorized Biography of Sir Thomas Sopwith, 1888–1989, Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens (provides information about Camm and his association with Sopwith).Dictionary of National Biography, 1961–70.CM -
16 Mansfield, Charles Blachford
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 8 May 1819 Rowner, Hampshire, Englandd. 26 February 1855 London, England[br]English chemist, founder of coal-tar chemistry.[br]Mansfield, the son of a country clergyman, was educated privately at first, then at Winchester College and at Cambridge; ill health, which dogged his early years, delayed his graduation until 1846. He was first inclined to medicine, but after settling in London, chemistry seemed to him to offer the true basis of the grand scheme of knowledge he aimed to establish. After completing the chemistry course at the Royal College of Chemistry in London, he followed the suggestion of its first director, A.W.von Hofmann, of investigating the chemistry of coal tar. This work led to a result of great importance for industry by demonstrating the valuable substances that could be extracted from coal tar. Mansfield obtained pure benzene, and toluene by a process for which he was granted a patent in 1848 and published in the Chemical Society's journal the same year The following year he published a pamphlet on the applications of benzene.Blessed with a private income, Mansfield had no need to support himself by following a regular profession. He was therefore able to spread his brilliant talents in several directions instead of confining them to a single interest. During the period of unrest in 1848, he engaged in social work with a particular concern to improve sanitation. In 1850, a description of a balloon machine in Paris led him to study aeronautics for a while, which bore fruit in an influential book, Aerial Navigation (London, 1851). He then visited Paraguay, making a characteristically thorough and illuminating study of conditions there. Upon his return to London in 1853, Mansfield resumed his chemical studies, especially on salts. He published his results in 1855 as Theory of Salts, his most important contribution to chemical theory.Mansfield was in the process of preparing specimens of benzene for the Paris Exhibition of 1855 when a naphtha still overflowed and caught fire. In carrying it to a place of safety, Mansfield sustained injuries which unfortunately proved fatal.[br]Bibliography1851, Aerial Navigation, London. 1855, Theory of Salts, London.Further ReadingE.R.Ward, 1969, "Charles Blachford Mansfield, 1819–1855, coal tar chemist and social reformer", Chemistry and Industry 66:1,530–7 (offers a good and well-documented account of his life and achievements).LRDBiographical history of technology > Mansfield, Charles Blachford
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