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Fareham

  • 1 Fareham

    [fʌ/ərəm]
    proper name
    kraj. ime

    English-Slovenian dictionary > Fareham

  • 2 Cort, Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1740 Lancaster, England
    d. 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]
    Bibliography
    1787, 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 Reading
    H.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

    Biographical history of technology > Cort, Henry

  • 3 Tizard, Sir Henry Thoms

    SUBJECT AREA: Weapons and armour
    [br]
    b. 23 August 1885 Gillingham, Kent, England
    d. 9 October 1959 Fareham, Hampshire, England
    [br]
    English scientist and administrator who made many contributions to military technology.
    [br]
    Educated at Westminster College, in 1904 Tizard went to Magdalen College, Oxford, gaining Firsts in mathematics and chemistry. After a period of time in Berlin with Nernst, he joined the Royal Institution in 1909 to study the colour changes of indicators. From 1911 until 1914 he was a tutorial Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, but with the outbreak of the First World War he joined first the Royal Garrison Artillery, then, in 1915, the newly formed Royal Flying Corps, to work on the development of bomb-sights. Successively in charge of testing aircraft, a lieutenant-colonel in the Ministry of Munitions and Assistant Controller of Research and Experiments for the Royal Air Force, he returned to Oxford in 1919 and the following year became Reader in Chemical Thermodynamics; at this stage he developed the use of toluene as an air-craft-fuel additive.
    In 1922 he was appointed an assistant secretary at the government Department of Industrial and Scientific Research, becoming Principal Assistant Secretary in 1922 and its Permanent Director in 1927; during this time he was also a member of the Aeronautical Research Committee, being Chairman of the latter in 1933–43. From 1929 to 1942 he was Rector of Imperial College. In 1932 he was also appointed Chairman of a committee set up to investigate possible national air-defence systems, and it was largely due to his efforts that the radar proposals of Watson-Watt were taken up and an effective system made operational before the outbreak of the Second World War. He was also involved in various other government activities aimed at applying technology to the war effort, including the dam-buster and atomic bombs.
    President of Magdalen College in 1942–7, he then returned again to Whitehall, serving as Chairman of the Advisory Council on Scientific Policy and of the Defence Research Policy Committee. Finally, in 1952, he became Pro-Chan-cellor of Southampton University.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Air Force Cross 1918. CB 1927. KCB 1937. GCB 1949. American Medal of Merit 1947. FRS 1926. Ten British and Commonwealth University honorary doctorates. Hon. Fellowship of the Royal Aeronautical Society. Royal Society of Arts Gold Medal. Franklin Institute Gold Medal. President, British Association 1948. Trustee of the British Museum 1937–59.
    Bibliography
    1911, The sensitiveness of indicators', British Association Report (describes Tizard's work on colour changes in indicators).
    Further Reading
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Tizard, Sir Henry Thoms

См. также в других словарях:

  • Fareham — Le ruisseau de Fareham, en 2006 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Fareham — (spr. Fehrhämm), Stadt in der englischen Grafschaft Hampshire, am Hafen von Ports. mouth, des Kanals la Manche; Werfte, Verfertigung von Tauen u. Seilen, Handel mit Kohlen, Getreide u. Öl; besuchtes Seebad; 3500 Ew. Hier zweigt die Southampton… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Fareham — (spr. fǟr häm), Hafenstadt in Hampshire (England), im Hintergrunde der Bucht von Portsmouth, mit Ziegel und Tonwarenfabrikation, Dampfmühle, Handel und (1901) 8246 Einw …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Fareham — (spr. fährämm), Stadt in der engl. Grafsch. Hampshire, an der Bucht von Portsmouth, (1901) 8246 E …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Fareham —   [ fɛərəm], Stadt in der County Hampshire, Südengland, bildet eine administrative Einheit mit Portchester, 54 900 Einwohner; Hafen im Innern des Portsmouth Harbour (Bucht des Ärmelkanals); Boots und Maschinenbau, Baustoff und… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Fareham — infobox UK place country = England latitude= 50.85 longitude= 1.18 official name= Fareham shire district = Fareham shire county = Hampshire region= South East England constituency westminster= Fareham post town= FAREHAM postcode district = PO14… …   Wikipedia

  • Fareham — 50.856111111111 1.1833333333333 Koordinaten: 50° 51′ N, 1° 11′ W …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Fareham — Fare·ham (fârʹəm) An urban district of southern England on Portsmouth harbor north northwest of Portsmouth. It is a shipbuilding center. Population: 100,987. * * * ▪ Hampshire, England, United Kingdom       town and borough (district), county of… …   Universalium

  • Fareham — Original name in latin Fareham Name in other language farham, fei lei mu State code GB Continent/City Europe/London longitude 50.85162 latitude 1.17929 altitude 10 Population 57390 Date 2011 03 03 …   Cities with a population over 1000 database

  • Fareham (borough) — Fareham is a local government district and borough in Hampshire, England. Its council is based in Fareham. Other places within the Borough include Portchester, Stubbington, Hill Head, Titchfield, Warsash, Locks Heath, Sarisbury and half of… …   Wikipedia

  • Fareham College — is a further education college situated on a 10 acre campus on the western outskirts of the town of Fareham in Hampshire, England. The college s intake mainly comes from the boroughs of Fareham and Gosport, and the surrounding areas of south east …   Wikipedia

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