- Eaton Hodgkinson
Eaton A. Hodgkinson (
February 26 ,1789 -June 18 ,1861 ) was an Englishengineer , a pioneer of the application ofmathematics to problems of structural design.Early life
Hodgkinson was born in the village of Anderton, near
Great Budworth ,Cheshire to afarming family. His father died when Hodgkinson was six years old and he was raised with his two sisters by his mother who maintained the farming business. She sent her son toWitton Grammar School inNorthwich where he studied theclassics with the intention that he would fulfill the family's ambition that he prepares for a career in theChurch of England . Unfortunately, the regime was unsuited to his tastes and talents which were already showing promise in mathematics. His mother moved him to a less prestigious private school in Northwich where his enthusiasm for mathematics was encouraged and fostered but, as the young Hodgkinson grew physically, he became indispensable on the family farm and soon left education to devote himself there.However, farming was no more to his taste than Greek and
Latin and his mother yearned to satisfy her son's appetites. Family friends advised that Hodgkinson might find some more suitable outlet in nearbyManchester and so, in 1811, the family left forSalford to open apawnbroking business. Hodgkinson used all his spare time in readingscience and mathematics and soon introduced himself into Manchester's scientific community, meeting, among others, his future collaborator, SirWilliam Fairbairn . He became a pupil ofJohn Dalton , studying mathematics, and the two remained firm friends until Dalton's death in 1844. He retired early from the family business to devote a modest pension to his scientific work.He married twice, to Catherine Johns and to a Miss Holditch. There were no children.
cientific work
Hodgkinson worked with Sir
William Fairbairn inManchester on the design ofiron beams. His improved cross section was published by theManchester Literary and Philosophical Society in 1830 and influenced much nineteenth centurystructural engineering . He derived the empirical formula for a concentrated load, "W" (inton s), at which a beam will fail as a function of its length between simple supports, "L" (ininch es); its depth, "d" (in inches); and its bottom-flangearea , "A" (inch²)::
His expertise with beams led to his retention, along with Fairbairn, as consultant on the novel tubular design for the
Britannia Bridge . Fairbairn built and tested several prototypes, and developed the final form adopted for the bridge. Both Hodgkinson andRobert Stephenson believed that extra chains would be needed to support the heavy spans, so the towers were built with spaces for the chains. Fairbairn, however, insisted that chains would not be necessary, and his opinion prevailed. He was right, and chains were never used, but the towers remain with their empty recesses.Later years
Hodgkinson was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society in 1841 and, in 1847, he became professor of the mechanical principles of engineering atUniversity College London . In 1849, he was appointed by theUK Parliament to participate in aRoyal Commission to investigate the application of iron inrailroad structures, performing some early investigations ofmetal fatigue .Towards the end of his life, his mental faculties failed and he died at
Higher Broughton ,Salford .Bibliography
*"Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Enquire into the Application of Iron to Railway Structures" (1849) cmd. 1123, HMSO
*Petroski, H. (1994) "Design Paradigms: Case Histories of Error and Judgement in Engineering" ISBN 0-521-46108-1
*Rawson, R (1865) "Memoir of Eaton Hodgkinson", "Transactions of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society", vol II, reprinted in "Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institute" (1868), pp203-230
*Timoshenko, S. P. (1953) "History of Strength of Materials", pp126-129
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