- Bryan Donkin
Infobox Person
name = Bryan Donkin
image_size = 150px
caption = Bryan Donkin
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birth_date =22 March 1768
birth_place =Sandoe ,Northumberland
death_date =27 February 1855
death_place =
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nationality = English
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footnotes =Bryan Donkin (
22 March 1768 –27 February 1855 ) was an English engineer and industrialist. Of his six sons, John, Bryan, and Thomas also became engineers.Early life
Born in Sandoe,
Northumberland , his father was a surveyor and land agent. Donkin initially began work in the same business, and worked for a year or two as land agent to the Duke of Dorset.Career
While working for the Duke of Dorset, Donkin consulted the engineer
John Smeaton , an acquaintance of his father, as to how he could become an engineer. At Smeaton's advice in 1792 he apprenticed himself to John Hall inDartford ,Kent , who had founded theDartford Iron Works in 1785. Shortly after completing his apprenticeship, he set himself up in Dartford, with the support of John Hall, making moulds for paper works, for at that time all paper making was done by hand. In 1798 he married Mary Brames, daughter of Peter Brames, a neighbouring land owner and market gardener, and a prominent supporter of the Methodist movement. By doing so Donkin became brother in law to John Hall, who had married Mary's elder sister Sarah in 1791. [Hesketh, Everard, J & E Hall Ltd 1785 to 1935, Glasgow University Press, 1935.]Fourdrinier machine
In 1801-2 Donkin was entrusted with the construction of a prototype of a paper-making machine, the famous
Fourdrinier machine , the perfection of which had caused some considerable problems. Donkin took premises atBermondsey ,London in 1802, thus starting the enterprise that became the Bryan Donkin Company, which still continues in business in the early 21st century. In 1804 he succeeded in producing a working machine. A second, improved one, was made the following year and in 1810 eighteen of the complex machines had been erected at various mills. Although the original design was not Donkin's, he received the credit for having perfected them and brought them into use. His company continued to make such machines, and by 1851 had produced nearly 200 machines for use across the world. [cite book | last = Walker Jr. | first = William | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Memoirs of the Distinguished Men of Science of Great Britain Living in the Years 1807-8 | publisher = W. Walker & Son | date = 1862 | location = London | pages = pp. 75-77 | url = http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=I2UBAAAAQAAJ | doi = | id = | isbn = ] [A Brief Account of Bryan Donkin FRS and of the Company he Founded 150 years ago. Bryan Donkin Company Ltd, Chesterfield, 1953]Printing machinery
Donkin also worked with printing machinery. In 1813 he and a printer, Richard Mackenzie Bacon of
Norwich , obtained a patent for a "Polygonal printing machine"; this used types placed on a rotatingprism . Ink was applied by a roller which rose and fell with the irregularities of the prism, and the paper was wrapped around a second prism. One of these machines was set up forCambridge University . It however proved too complicated and suffered from poor inking, which prevented its success. However, it was the first machine to introduce composition ink rollers which were considered better thanFriedrich Koenig 's leather-covered rollers. [cite book | last = Herbert | first = Luke | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = The Engineer's & Mechanic's Encyclopeadia | publisher = Kelly | date = 1849 | location = | pages = p. 345 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = ]Tinned food
Donkin had by now become a partner in John Hall's firm and had become interested in the problem of canning food in metal containers. After various experiments, he acquired
Philippe de Girard 's patent in 1812 for the sum of £1000 and in association with Hall and Gamble he set up a canning factory in Bermondsey, the first cannery to usetinned iron containers. Donkin applied to the BritishAdmiralty for a test of his product and the first sizable orders were placed in 1814 with the firm of Donkin, Hall and Gamble for meat preserved intinned iron canisters. The firm of Donkin, Hall and Gamble was later merged intoCrosse & Blackwell s. [cite book | last = Robertson | first = Gordon L. | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Food Packaging: Principles and Practice | publisher = CRC Press | date = 2005 | location = | pages = p. 123 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0849337755]Difference engine
In 1829,
Charles Babbage requested Donkin's assistance withGeorge Rennie (engineer) , in investigating the ownership of intellectual property, tooling and piece-parts of thedifference engine , whose manufacture had been commissioned by Babbage fromJoseph Clement .In 1857 the British government authorized the sum of £1200 for a full-scale
difference engine with attached printing apparatus based on the design ofPer Georg Scheutz and his son Edvard to be constructed by Donkin's company, which had acquired a reputation for building machines for the colour printing of banknotes and stamps. Costs overran and Donkin delivered the machine in July 1859, several weeks past the deadline, incurring a loss of £615.Despite the engine's printing unit working badly, the Royal Society and the
Astronomer Royal were generally positive when they inspected it onAugust 30 1859, expressing their satisfaction at its construction. Donkin was unhappy that he had lost so much money on the project, which he attributed to the engine's unexpected intricacy and the fact that he had had very little to base his original cost estimate on, Edvard Scheutz having given him very little information. In addition, costly machine tools had had to be made specially to make the engine's components and many alterations had been introduced along the way. [cite book | last = Lindgren | first = Michael | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Glory and Failure: The Difference Engines of Johann Müller, Charles Babbage and Georg and Edvard Scheutz | publisher = MIT Press | date = 1990 | location = | pages = p. 226 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0262121468]The machine was used by
William Farr at theGeneral Register Office to computelife table s, which were published in 1864. It operated on 15-digit numbers and 4th-order differences, and produced printed output just as Charles Babbage had envisaged. This machine is now in theLondon Science Museum .Civil engineering
*As an eminent engineer Donkin was often consulted on civil engineering matters. He supported
Thomas Telford 's 1814 proposals for a massivesuspension bridge atRuncorn and in 1821 reported along withHenry Maudslay on an iron bridge erected byRalph Dodd at Springfield,Chelmsford .
* In the 1820s Donkin became involved with theThames Tunnel project, having become acquainted withMarc Brunel when he had supplied equipment for his machinery atChatham Dockyard . In addition, in 1829 his eldest son John Donkin married Caroline Hawes, the daughter of the Tunnel Chairman, Benjamin Hawes.
* In 1825-27 Donkin supplied pumps for removing water from the tunnel and also workmen for modifying thetunneling shield ; at one time it was even suggested that he replace Brunel as engineer.
* In 1826 he constructed a model of a landing stage proposed by Brunel for use atLiverpool .
* Donkin's works regularly supplied machinery for use in civil engineering projects, includingdredging machines for the Prussian Government in 1817 and for theCalder and Hebble Navigation in 1824. Much was also supplied for theCaledonian Canal including stationary engines for use in construction of the locks.
* Thomas Telford employed Donkin in his survey of rivers in the London area for the Water Supply report completed shortly before his death.Other work
*In 1820 Donkin worked with Sir William Congreve on preventing the forgery of excise stamps, using a method of two-colour printing with compound printing plates. Working with his partner John Wilks, he produced a machine which was used by the Excise and Stamp Office and also by the East India Company at
Calcutta .
*By 1847, Donkin's company had designed its first products for the emerging gas industry. The name Donkin has since become a generic name for certain gas valves and Bryan Donkin RMG Gas Controls Limited remains agoing concern in Europe.
* Among Donkin's other inventions were a screw-cutting and dividing machine; an instrument to measure the velocity of rotating machinery; and a counting engine. The last two received the Royal Society of Arts Prize medal.Institutions
*In 1805, with John Hall and others, he formed the
Society of Master Millwrights , acting as its treasurer.
*He was a member of the Royal Society of Arts, becoming a Vice-president and Chairman of the Committee of Mechanics.
*Donkin was one of the originators and a vice-president of theInstitution of Civil Engineers , which was founded byHenry Palmer , one of his pupils. He also helped the Institution to obtain itsRoyal Charter in 1928, advancing 100guinea s towards the costs.
* Donkin was elected a member of theSmeatonian Society of Civil Engineers in 1835 and served as its president in 1843.Watson, Garth (1989), "The Smeatonians: Society of Civil Engineers", London: Thomas Telford, ISBN 0-727-71526-7]
* He was a founder member of theRoyal Astronomical Society .Notes
References
* "Chronicle of Britain" ISBN 1-872031-35-8
* GIS/V12:2006 Gas Industry Standard Specification for Sealant replacement for valves operating up to and including 2 bar
* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9030928/Bryan-Donkin Britannica article on Donkin]
*Dictionary of National BiographyExternal links
* [http://www.level-two.co.uk/report.php?locname=donkin Bryan Donkin Chesterfield Foundry]
Persondata
NAME= Donkin, Bryan
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=
DATE OF BIRTH=22 March 1768
PLACE OF BIRTH=Sandoe ,Northumberland
DATE OF DEATH=27 February 1855
PLACE OF DEATH=
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