- Peter Lloyd (mountaineer)
Peter Lloyd CBE (born
26 June 1907 ,Sheffield ,England , diedToowoomba ,Queensland ,Australia ,11 April 2003 ), was a mountaineer and engineer, a President of the Alpine Club.Education
The son of an economics lecturer, Lloyd was educated at
Gresham's School , Holt, from 1921 to 1924, and then readEngineering atTrinity College, Cambridge . While there, he was president of the University's Mountaineering Club.Climber
He continued with his climbing and became an experienced alpinist in the late 1920s and early 1930s. In 1936, he was chosen for an Anglo-American expedition to India's highest mountain,
Nanda Devi , led byBill Tilman , who called him "first-rate on rock and ice". [http://www.guardian.co.uk/everest/story/0,,955844,00.html Obituary of Peter Lloyd] at "The Guardian " online (accessed 4 May 2008)]In 1938, Tilman assembled a team for an attempt on
Mount Everest , and again he chose Lloyd. This expedition reached a height of 27,200 feet.Lloyd used his engineering skills to work on oxygen equipment for high-altitude climbing, favouring a system which used ordinary air as well as cylinder oxygen. He thus contributed greatly to John Hunt's successful ascent of
Mount Everest in 1953, commenting on the oxygen question - "I have a lot of sympathy with the sentimental objection to its use, and would rather see the mountain climbed without it than with; but, on the other hand, I would rather see the mountain climbed with it than not climbed at all." Lloyd was also a member of theJoint Himalayan Committee , which organised and financed the expedition.John Hunt, "The Ascent of Everest", Hodder and Stoughton, 1953, p. 37He was President of the Alpine Club from 1977 to 1980 and delivered a moving oration at the memorial service in 1978 of
Bill Tilman , who was lost at sea in the south Atlantic at the age of 79.Career
After Cambridge, Lloyd worked as an engineer on furnace design for the Gas Light and Coke Company in
London .At the outbreak of
World War II in 1939, Lloyd found he was prevented from active military service by having a reserved occupation, and he joined theRoyal Aircraft Establishment , working on defences against low-flying aircraft. He then joinedHayne Constant 's team working to develop gas turbine engines. In 1943, they produced a prototype jet engine before merging withSir Frank Whittle 's Power Jets group.After the War, Lloyd became head of the combustion department of the National Gas Turbine Establishment, and in 1950 he was appointed as its deputy director. From 1961 until 1969, he was the director-general of the
Ministry of Aviation 's Research and Development division, later heading the UK defence research and supply staff inAustralia . At the Ministry of Aviation, he was closely involved in the design of the Rolls-Royce Spey and Tay engines, and the Bristol/Rolls-Royce Pegasus engine which powers the vertical take-offBAE Sea Harrier .Retirement
After his retirement, Lloyd emigrated to
Australia , settling inQueensland , where he died.Family
Lloyd was married twice and had one son and one daughter from his first marriage.
References
* [http://imagingeverest.rgs.org/Units/48.html Lloyd at the Royal Geographical Society]
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