Henry Winram Dickinson (28 August 1870 – 21 February 1952) was a British engineering historian and biographer who spent much of his career at the Science Museum (1895–1930), where he rose to be senior keeper of the mechanical engineering department. His biographies include Robert Fulton (1913), John Wilkinson (1914), James Watt (1936) and Matthew Boulton (1937), and he also published a history of the steam engine (1939). He was a founding member of the Newcomen Society, of which he was president (1932–34), and served as editor of their Transactions (1920–50); he is commemorated in the society's Dickinson memorial lecture.
Early life and education
editDickinson was born at Ulverston in Lancashire on 28 August 1870,[1][2] to Margaret Anne (née Winram) and John Dickinson, who ran an iron and steel company.[1] Henry Dickinson was educated at the local Victoria Grammar School and later Manchester Grammar School, and then read engineering at Owens College (Victoria University of Manchester).[1][2][3] He served an apprenticeship and worked for several years in the Glasgow iron and steel industry.[1][3]
Career
editIn 1895, Dickinson gained an assistant role in the South Kensington Museum's science department – the Science Museum from 1909. Apart from the First World War, when he served on the Ministry of Munitions' inventions panel (1915–18), he remained at the Science Museum until his retirement in 1930, rising to the machinery division's assistant keeper (1900), keeper of the mechanical engineering department (1924) and at the time of his retirement, senior keeper; from 1914 he was also secretary to the museum's advisory council.[1][3] While at the Science Museum he was responsible for acquiring and displaying James Watt's engines, as well as the contents of his Handsworth workshop.[1][4][5]
One of the founding members of the Newcomen Society in 1920, he was its president (1932–34), honorary secretary (1920–32, 1934–51) and the editor of its Transactions (1920–50),[1][3] the last described in Nature as "[h]is greatest work".[4] He was credited as a major reason for the society's success.[6] In 1923 and 1938, he toured the United States giving lectures;[1] these visits were credited with stimulating the foundation of the Newcomen Society of the United States.[2][6] Lehigh University, Pennsylvania, awarded him an honorary doctorate in engineering (1938).[1][3][7]
He published biographies of key figures in the Industrial Revolution, Robert Fulton (1913), John Wilkinson (1914), Richard Trevithick (with Arthur Titley; 1934), James Watt (1936) and Matthew Boulton (1937),[1][3][8] described by Arthur Stowers in his Oxford Dictionary of National Biography article as "definitive".[1] In 1927, with Rhys Jenkins, he published James Watt and the Steam Engine, described in his obituary in The Guardian as a "monumental volume".[8] He was particularly interested in the steam engine, on which he published a history in 1939, and was vice-president of the Cornish Engines Preservation Society.[1][3] He wrote many articles for the Newcomen Society, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers and The Engineer.[1]
Personal life and legacy
editHe was married twice: in 1897 to Edith Emerson, and after her death in 1937, to Elsa Lees Burgan in 1939.[1] His first marriage resulted in a son, Henry Douglas Dickinson (1899–1969), an economist.[1][9]
Henry Winram Dickinson died on 21 February 1952 at Purley in Surrey.[1][2] The Newcomen Society honoured him with their biennial Dickinson memorial lecture (1954), first given by Charles Singer;[1][4][10] the Newcomen Society of the United States commemorated him with a memorial plaque in the Thomas Newcomen Library of West Chester, Pennsylvania.[1] His research notes are archived at the Science Museum.[11]
Publications
edit- Robert Fulton, Engineer and Artist: His Life and Works (1913)[12]
- John Wilkinson (1914)[1]
- James Watt and the Steam Engine (with Rhys Jenkins; 1927)[1]
- Richard Trevithick: The Engineer and the Man (with Arthur Titley; 1934)[13]
- James Watt: Craftsman and Engineer (1936)[14]
- Matthew Boulton (1937)[15]
- A Short History of the Steam Engine (1939)[16]
- James Watt and the Industrial Revolution (with H. P. Vowles; 1944, 1948)[17]
- Water Supply of Greater London (1954)[1]
- Sir Samuel Morland, Diplomat and Inventor, 1625–1695 (1970)[18]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Arthur Stowers (2004). Dickinson, Henry Winram. In: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press) doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32816
- ^ a b c d Edgar C. Smith (1952). Dr. H. W. Dickinson. Nature 169: 440–41 doi:10.1038/169440b0
- ^ a b c d e f g Dr. Henry Winram Dickinson. The Times (52249), p. 8 (1 March 1952)
- ^ a b c The Dickinson Memorial Lecture. Nature 173: 1027 (1954) doi:10.1038/1731027a0
- ^ Ben Russell (2014). Preserving the Dust: The Role of Machines in Commemorating the Industrial Revolution. History and Memory 26 (2): 106–32 doi:10.2979/histmemo.26.2.106
- ^ a b The Newcomen Society: Dr. H. W. Dickinson. Nature 169: 57 (1952) doi:10.1038/169057a0
- ^ Founder's Day: Speaker Urges Live Education. The Morning Call, p. 6 (6 October 1938)
- ^ a b Dr H. W. Dickinson. The Guardian, p. 5 (26 February 1952)
- ^ David Collard (2004). Dickinson, Henry Douglas. In: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press) doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/40540
- ^ The Dickinson Memorial Lecture, Newcomen Society (accessed 20 November 2023)
- ^ Collection of H.W. Dickinson, Science Museum (accessed 20 November 2023)
- ^ Reviews include:
- Walter M. McFarland (1914). Review: Robert Fulton, Engineer and Artist: His Life and Works by H. W. Dickinson. The American Historical Review 19 (3): 623–26 JSTOR 1835102
- H. C. Sadler (1914). Review: Robert Fulton Engineer and Artist: His Life and Works by H. W. Dickinson. The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1 (1): 129–30 JSTOR 1896961
- F. W. Taussig (1915). Two Biographies of Inventors: Dickinson's Life of Fulton and Morse's Letters of Morse. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 29 (3): 642–46 JSTOR 1885467
- ^ Reviews include:
- H. W. Elkinton (1934). Review: Richard Trevithick, the engineer and the man: by H. W. Dickinson and Arthur Titley. Journal of the Franklin Institute 218 (5): 634–35 doi:10.1016/S0016-0032(34)90741-9
- C. E. R. Sherrington (1934). Review: Richard Trevithick. The Engineer and the Man. Trevithick Centenary Commemoration Memorial Volume by H. W. Dickinson, Arthur Titley. Science Progress 29 (113): 181–82 JSTOR 43420926
- The Steam Engine: Centenary of Richard Trevithick. The Times (46677), p. 17 (13 February 1934)
- Review: Richard Trevithick by H. W. Dickinson, Arthur Titley. The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin (34): 71 (1934) JSTOR 43519672
- ^ Reviews include:
- G. T. R. H. (1937). Review: James Watt : Craftsman and Engineer by H. W. Dickinson. Science Progress 31 (123): 587 JSTOR 43411894
- A. E. Musson (1969). Review: James Watt, Craftsman and Engineer by H. W. Dickinson. The Economic History Review 22 (1): 162 JSTOR 2591994
- ^ Reviews include:
- R. H. Oppermann (1937). Review: Matthew Boulton: by H. W. Dickinson. Journal of the Franklin Institute 224 (1): 125–26 doi:10.1016/S0016-0032(37)90116-9
- C. E. R. S. (1937). Review: Matthew Boulton by H. W. Dickinson. Science Progress 32 (126): 396–97 JSTOR 43421501
- Mathew Boulton by H. W. Dickinson. The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin (44): 108 (1937) JSTOR 43517188
- Herbert Heaton (1939). Review: Matthew Boulton by H. W. Dickinson. The American Historical Review 44 (3): 615–16 JSTOR 1839933
- ^ Reviews include:
- R. H. Oppermann (1939). Review: A short history of the steam engine: by H. W. Dickinson. Journal of the Franklin Institute 227 (6): 860–61 doi:10.1016/S0016-0032(39)90848-3
- John W. Oliver (1939). Review: A Short History of the Steam Engine by H. W. Dickinson. The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 63 (3): 359–60 JSTOR 20087208
- C. E. R. Sherrington (1939). Review: A Short History of the Steam Engine by H. W. Dickinson. Science Progress 34, (134): 431–32 JSTOR 43412796
- T. S. Ashton (1940). Review: The Collected Papers of Rhys Jenkins. by Rhys Jenkins. A Short History of the Steam Engine. by H. W. Dickinson. The Economic History Review 10 (2): 178–79 JSTOR 2590807
- W. H. B. Court (1940). Review: A Short History of the Steam-Engine by H. W. Dickinson. Economic History 4 (15): 403–5 JSTOR 45366599
- ^ Reviews include:
- Eric Roll (1946). Review: James Watt and the Industrial Revolution. by H. W. Dickinson, H. P. Vowles. The Journal of Economic History 6 (2): 225–26 JSTOR 2113108
- Review: James Watt and the industrial revolution: by H. W. Dickinson and H. P. Vowles. Second edition. Journal of the Franklin Institute 247 (4): 433 (1949) doi:10.1016/0016-0032(49)90847-9
- ^ Eric Robinson (1980). Review: Sir Samuel Morland, Diplomat and Inventor, 1625–1695 by H. W. Dickinson. Technology and Culture 21 (4): 654–55 Project Muse 890764
Further reading
edit- Obituary in Engineering (29 February 1952), including portrait
- Obituary in The Engineer (29 February 1952)
- Obituary in Transactions of the Newcomen Society 28: 286–88 (1953)
- C. Singer (1955). The happy scholar: the first Dickinson memorial lecture. Transactions of the Newcomen Society 29: 125–35