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Dulwich College

  • 1 Dulwich College

    ['dʌlɪdʒ,kɔlɪdʒ]
    Да́лидж-Ко́лледж (большая мужская привилегированная частная средняя школа [ public school] в пригороде Лондона Далидже [ Dulwich]. Основана в 1619; более 1300 учащихся)

    English-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > Dulwich College

  • 2 Dulwich

    ['dʌlɪdʒ]
    Да́лидж (живописный пригород южного Лондона со старинными домами, известной картинной галереей [Dulwich College Picture Gallery] и парком)

    English-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > Dulwich

  • 3 Thomas, Sidney Gilchrist

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 16 April 1850 London, England
    d. 1 February 1885 Paris, France
    [br]
    English inventor of basic steelmaking.
    [br]
    Thomas was educated at Dulwich College and from the age of 17, for the next twelve years, he made his living as a police-court clerk, although he studied chemistry in his spare time as an evening student at Birkbeck College, London. While there, he heard of the difficulties encountered by the Bessemer steelmaking process, which at that time was limited to using phosphorus-free iron. Any of this element present in the iron was oxidized to phosphoric acid, which would not react with the acidic lining in the converter, with the result that it would remain in the iron and render it too brittle to use. Unfortunately, phosphoric iron ores are more common than those free of this harmful element. Thomas was attracted by the view that a fortune awaited anyone who could solve this problem, and was not discouraged by the failure of several august figures in the industry, including Siemens and Lowthian Bell.
    Thomas's knowledge of chemistry taught him that whereas an acidic lining allowed the phosphorus to remain in the iron, a basic lining would react with it to form part of the slag, which could then be tapped off. His experiments to find a suitable material were conducted in difficult conditions, in his spare time with meagre apparatus. Finally he found that a converter lined with dolomite, a form of limestone, would succeed, and he appealed to his cousin Percy Carlyle Gilchrist, Chemist at the Blaenavon Ironworks in Monmouthshire, for help in carrying out pilot-scale trials. In 1879 he gave up his police-court job to devote himself to the work, and in the same year they patented the Thomas- Gilchrist process. The first licence to use it was granted to Bolckow, Vaughan \& Co. of Middlesborough, and there the first steel was made in a basic Bessemer converter on 4 April 1879. The process was rapidly taken up and spread widely in Europe and beyond and was applied to other furnaces. Thomas made a fortune, but his health did not long allow him to enjoy it, for he died at the early age of 34.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    L.G.Thompson, 1940, Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, an Invention and Its Consequences, London: Faber.
    T.G.Davies, 1978, Blaenavon and Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, Sheffield: Historical Metallurgy Society.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Thomas, Sidney Gilchrist

  • 4 Voigt, Paul Gustavus Adolphus Helmuth

    [br]
    b. 9 December 1901 Forest Hill, London, England
    d. 9 February 1981 Brighton, Ontario, Canada
    [br]
    English/Canadian electronics engineer, developer of electromechanical recording and reproductions systems, amplifiers and loudspeakers.
    [br]
    He received his education at Dulwich College and in 1922 graduated with a BSc from University College, London. He had an early interest in the application of valve amplifiers, and after graduating he was employed by J.E.Hough, Edison Bell Works, to develop a line of radio-receiving equipment. However, he became interested in the mechanical (and later electrical) side of recording and from 1925 developed principles and equipment. In particular he developed capacitor microphones, not only for in-house work but also commercially, until the mid-1930s. The Edison Bell company did not survive the Depression and closed in 1933. Voigt founded his own company, Voigt Patents Ltd, concentrating on loudspeakers for cinemas and developing horn loudspeakers for domestic use. During the Second World War he continued to develop loudspeaker units and gramophone pick-ups, and in 1950 he emigrated to Toronto, Canada, but his company closed. Voigt taught electronics, and from 1960 to 1969 he was employed by the Radio Regulations Laboratory in Ottawa. After retirement he worked with theoretical cosmology and fundamental interactions.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Most of Voigt's patents are concerned with improvements in the magnetic circuit in dynamic loudspeakers and centring devices for diaphragms. However, UK patent nos. 278,098, 404,037 and 447,749 may be regarded as particularly relevant. In 1940 Voigt contributed a remarkable paper on the principles of equalization in mechanical recording: "Getting the best from records, part 1—the recording characteristic", Wireless World (February): 141–4.
    Further Reading
    Personal accounts of experiences with Voigt may be found in "Paul Voigt's contribution to Audio", British Kinematography Sound and Television (October 1970): 316–27, which also includes a list of his patents.
    GB-N

    Biographical history of technology > Voigt, Paul Gustavus Adolphus Helmuth

  • 5 Old Alleynian

    [əuldə'leɪnjən]
    (бы́вший) воспи́танник Да́лидж-Ко́лледжа [ Dulwich College]
    по имени основателя колледжа, известного актёра Э.Аллейна [E.Alleyn, 1566-1626]

    English-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > Old Alleynian

  • 6 Alleyne, Sir John Gay Newton

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 8 September 1820 Barbados
    d. 20 February 1912 Falmouth, Cornwall, England
    [br]
    English iron and steel manufacturer, inventor of the reversing rolling mill.
    [br]
    Alleyne was the heir to a baronetcy created in 1769, which he succeeded to on the death of his father in 1870. He was educated at Harrow and at Bonn University, and from 1843 to 1851 he was Warden at Dulwich College, to the founder of which the family claimed to be related.
    Alleyne's business career began with a short spell in the sugar industry at Barbados, but he returned to England to enter Butterley Iron Works Company, where he remained for many years. He was at first concerned with the production of rolled-iron girders for floors, especially for fireproof flooring, and deck beams for iron ships. The demand for large sections exceeded the capacity of the small mills then in use at Butterley, so Alleyne introduced the welding of T-sections to form the required H-sections.
    In 1861 Alleyne patented a mechanical traverser for moving ingots in front of and behind a rolling mill, enabling one person to manipulate large pieces. In 1870 he introduced his major innovation, the two-high reversing mill, which enabled the metal to be passed back and forth between the rolls until it assumed the required size and shape. The mill had two steam engines, which supplied the motion in opposite directions. These two inventions produced considerable economies in time and effort in handling the metal and enabled much heavier pieces to be processed.
    During Alleyne's regime, the Butterley Company secured some notable contracts, such as the roof of St Paneras Station, London, in 1868, with the then-unparalleled span of 240 ft (73 m). The manufacture and erection of this awe-inspiring structure was a tribute to Alleyne's abilities. In 1872 he masterminded the design and construction of the large railway bridge over the Old Maas at Dordrecht, Holland. Alleyne also devised a method of determining small quantities of phosphorus in iron and steel by means of the spectroscope. In his spare time he was a skilled astronomical observer and metalworker in his private workshop.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1875, "The estimation of small quantities of phosphorus in iron and steel by spectrum analysis", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute: 62.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1912, Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute: 406–8.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Alleyne, Sir John Gay Newton

  • 7 Wright, Basil Martin

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 20 December 1912 Dulwich, London, England
    [br]
    English physician and research physiologist, inventor of the Wright Respirometer peak-flow meter for measurement of respiratory ventilatory capacity and of "fluid lens" spectacles.
    [br]
    He qualified at St Bartholomew's Hospital in 1938 and after early hospital posts served in the Army as a specialist in pathology in West Africa and Singapore. In 1947 he joined the Medical Research Council (MRC) and until 1957 he was involved with the Pneumoconiosis Research Unit in investigation of dust inhalation. In 1957 he transferred to the National Institute for Medical Research, to concentrate on instrument development, and in 1969 to the Bioengineering Division of the MRC Clinical Research Centre at Northwick Park Hospital. He was responsible for a number of instrumental developments and inventions in the fields, amongst others, of respiration measurement, blood alcohol levels and variable adjustable spectacle lenses (achieved by altering the curvature of the surface of a thinwalled transparent fluid cell).
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians 1989. Doctor of Medicine, Cambridge, 1969. International Inventors Fair Design Awards and Gold Medal.
    Bibliography
    1955, "A respiratory anemometer", Journal of Physiology.
    1959, with McKerrow, "Maximum forced expiatory flow rate as a measure of respiratory capacity", British Medical Journal.
    1978, "Variable focus spectacles", Transactions of the Ophthalmological Society of the
    UK.
    1986, "Patient-triggered ventilation in the new-born", Lancet.
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Wright, Basil Martin

См. также в других словарях:

  • Dulwich College — Das Dulwich College ist eine unabhängige Schule für Jungen im englischen Dulwich, in London. Das College wurde 1619 von Edward Alleyn gegründet und beherbergt heute über 1.500 Schüler im Alter von zwei bis 18 Jahren …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Dulwich College — [Dulwich College] a large ↑public school for boys in Dulwich, an area of south east London. It was started in 1619 by the actor Edward Alleyn. The writer P G Wodehouse was a student there …   Useful english dictionary

  • Dulwich College — Coordinates: 51°26′25″N 0°05′06″W / 51.440280°N 0.085045°W / 51.440280; 0.085045 …   Wikipedia

  • Dulwich College — 51° 26′ 25″ N 0° 05′ 06″ W / 51.44028, 0.08504 Dulwich College est …   Wikipédia en Français

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  • Dulwich College — a large public school for boys in Dulwich, an area of south east London. It was started in 1619 by the actor Edward Alleyn. The writer P G Wodehouse was a student there. * * * …   Universalium

  • Thomas Alleyn (3rd Master of Dulwich College) — Thomas Alleyn (died 15 March 1668/1669) was the third Master of the College of God s Gift in Dulwich (then colloquially called Dulwich College, the name it took officially in 1882).Early lifeHe was born in Willen, Buckinghamshire, the son of John …   Wikipedia

  • Dulwich Picture Gallery — Established 1817 Location Dulwich, London, England Website …   Wikipedia

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