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Dionysius Lardner

Dionysius Lardner FRS FRSE (3 April 1793 – 29 April 1859) was an Irish scientific writer who popularised science and technology, and edited the 133-volume Cabinet Cyclopædia.

Dionysius Lardner
Dionysius Lardner
Born(1793-04-03)3 April 1793
Dublin, Ireland
Died29 April 1859(1859-04-29) (aged 66)
Alma materTrinity College, Dublin
Known forCabinet Cyclopedia

Early life in Dublin

He was born in Dublin on 3 April 1793 the son of William Lardner, a solicitor in Dublin, who wished his son to follow the same calling. After some years of uncongenial desk work, Lardner entered Trinity College, Dublin, in 1812, and obtained a B.A. in 1817[1] and an M.A. in 1819, winning many prizes.

He married Cecilia Flood on 19 December 1815, but they separated in 1820 and were divorced in 1835. About the time of the separation, he began a relationship with a married woman, Anne Maria Darley Boursiquot, the wife of a Dublin wine merchant. It is believed that he fathered her son, Dion Boucicault, the actor and dramatist. Lardner provided him with financial support until 1840. Whilst in Dublin, Lardner began to write and lecture on scientific and mathematical matters, and to contribute articles for publication by the Irish Academy.[2]

Career in London

In 1828, Lardner was elected professor of natural philosophy and astronomy at University College, London, a position he held until he resigned his professorship in 1831.[citation needed]

Lardner showed himself to be a successful populariser of science, giving talks on contemporary topics such as Babbage's Difference Engine (1834).[3] He was the author of numerous mathematical and physical treatises on such subjects as algebraic geometry (1823), the differential and integral calculus (1825), and the steam engine (1828). He also wrote hand-books on various departments of natural philosophy (1854–1856); but it is as the editor of Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopædia (1830–1844) that he is best remembered.[citation needed]

The Cabinet Cyclopædia eventually comprised 133 volumes, and many of the ablest savants of the day contributed to it. Sir Walter Scott contributed a history of Scotland and Thomas Moore contributed a history of Ireland. Connop Thirlwall provided a history of Ancient Greece, whilst Robert Southey provided a section on naval history. Many eminent scientists contributed as well. Lardner himself was the author of the treatises on arithmetic, geometry, heat, hydrostatics and pneumatics, mechanics (in conjunction with Henry Kater) and electricity (in conjunction with C.V. Walker).[2]

The Cabinet Library (12 vols., 1830–1832) and the Museum of Science and Art (12 vols., 1854–1856) were his other chief undertakings. A few original papers appear in the Royal Irish Academy's Transactions (1824), in the Royal Society's Proceedings (1831–1836) and in the Astronomical Society's Monthly Notices (1852–1853); and two Reports to the British Association on railway constants (1838, 1841) are from his pen.[1]

Involvement in scandal

In 1840 Lardner's career received a major setback as a result of his involvement with Mary Spicer Heaviside, the wife of Captain Richard Heaviside, of the Dragoon Guards. He had previously been married to Cecilia Flood in 1815, but had separated in 1820. Lardner ran off to Paris with Mrs Heaviside, pursued by her husband. When he caught up with them, Heaviside subjected Lardner to a flogging; he was unable to persuade his wife to return with him. Later that year he successfully sued Lardner for "criminal conversation" (adultery) and received a judgment of £8,000.

The Heavisides were divorced in 1845, and in 1846 Lardner was able to marry Mary Heaviside. The scandal caused by his affair with a married woman effectively ended his career in England, so Lardner and his wife remained in Paris until shortly before his death in 1859. He was able to maintain his career by lecturing in the United States between 1841 and 1844, which proved financially rewarding,[2] realising £40,000.[1]

He died in Naples, Italy, and is buried in the Cimitero degli Inglesi there.[4]

Disagreements with Brunel

Lardner became involved in a number of ill-advised public disagreements with Isambard Kingdom Brunel regarding technical matters, in which he came off the worse.[citation needed]

During the 1833 Parliamentary hearings discussing the proposal of the Great Western Railway, Lardner criticised Brunel's design of the Box Tunnel. The tunnel had a 1-in-100 gradient from the east end to the west end. Lardner asserted that if a train's brakes were to fail in the tunnel, it would accelerate to over 120 mph (190 km/h), at which speed the train would break up and kill the passengers. Brunel pointed out that Lardner's calculations totally disregarded air resistance and friction, a basic error.[5]

In 1836, when Brunel was proposing to build SS Great Western for the 3,500 mi (5,600 km) transatlantic passage to New York, at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Lardner stated that:

As the project of making the voyage directly from New York to Liverpool, it was perfectly chimerical, and they might as well talk of making the voyage from New York to the moon... 2,080 mi (3,350 km) is the longest run that a steamer could encounter – at the end of that distance she would require a relay of coals.

Again, Brunel was able to show that Lardner's calculations were too simplistic. The principle that Brunel understood, which Lardner did not, was that the carrying capacity of a ship increases as the cube of its dimensions, whilst the water resistance only increases as the square of its dimensions. This meant that large ships were more fuel efficient, and could carry sufficient coal for the long voyage across the Atlantic. Brunel was proved right when the Great Western steamed into New York harbour with 200 long tons (200 tonnes) of coal to spare.[5][6]

In 1838 while Brunel was building the broad-gauge Great Western Railway, Lardner carried out some experiments with the company's flagship locomotive, North Star. He asserted that, whilst the engine was capable of hauling 82 long tons (83 tonnes) at 33 mph (53 km/h), it was only capable of hauling 16 long tons (16 tonnes) at 41 mph (66 km/h).

He also recorded excessive fuel consumption at higher speeds. Lardner attributed this to the greater wind resistance of broad-gauge engines. Brunel and his assistant Daniel Gooch carried out their own experiments on the same locomotive and found that the only problem was that the blast pipe was too small. This was easily rectified and the North Star's performance immediately improved. At the next meeting of the company's directors, Brunel triumphantly dismissed Lardner's evidence.[5]

Contemporary influence

Lardner is mentioned in Karl Marx's Das Kapital and was well respected as an economist. He mixed with the rich and famous. He was involved in the founding of the University of London and was the first person to hold the post of Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy there. He was influential in publicising Charles Babbage's Difference Engine.

Whilst lecturing in America Lardner was paid by Norris Brothers, the largest firm of locomotive builders, to investigate a fatal accident in Reading, near Philadelphia, where a boiler had exploded on a newly made train. Lardner pronounced that the accident had been caused by lightning, which meant that Norris Brothers were not personally liable for the accident. A committee of the Franklin Institute pointed out that there was no lightning present at that time and that the pumps had been faulty, the water indicator was ill-designed and the bridge bands made of cast iron rather than wrought iron. The Coroner's inquest jury were persuaded by Lardner that the accident was an 'act of God' but the company were careful to design their later locomotives with wrought-iron bands.[7]

Selected publications

  • (1828) Popular Lectures on the Steam Engine with James Renwick
  • (1830) Mechanics with Captain Henry Kater
  • (1830) The Western World Vol. 1 United States
  • (1831) Poland
  • (1831) Treatise on Algebraic Geometry
  • (1831) A Treatise on Mechanics Vol. 1 with Captain Henry Kater
  • (1831) A Treatise on... Silk Manufacture
  • (1832) Treatise on Hydrostatics and Pneumatics with Benjamin Franklin Joslin
  • (1832) History of Switzerland with Roy Gerald Fitzgerald
  • (1832) Lectures on the Steam-engine
  • (1834) An Historical View of the Progress of the Physical and Mathematical Sciences by Baden Powell
  • (1836) The Steam Engine Familiarly Explained and Illustrated with James Renwick
  • (1838) The History of Maritime and Inland Discovery Vol. 3
  • (1840) The Steam Engine Explained and Illustrated
  • (1842) Courses of Lectures: Delivered by Dionysius Lardner
  • (1843) Lardner's Outlines of Universal History
  • (1844) Investigation of the Causes of the Explosion of the Locomotive Engine, "Richmond"
  • (1845) Popular Lectures on Astronomy with François Arago
  • (1847) Encyclopaedia of Pure Mathematics with Peter Barlow, George Peacock
  • (1848) The First Six Books of the Elements of Euclid
  • (1849) Popular Lectures on Science and Art Vol. 1
  • (1850) Railway Economy
  • (1854) Hand-books of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy First Course
  • (1855) Common Things Explained
  • (1856) Steam and Its Uses
  • (1857) A Rudimentary Treatise on the Steam Engine
  • (1857) Natural Philosophy for Schools
  • (1858) A Hand-book of Optics
  • (1858) Hand-books of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy Vol. 1

Bibliography

  • A L Martin, Villain of Steam : A Life of Dionysius Lardner (1793-1859) (Carlow, Tyndall Scientific, 2015). References include:
    • Kieran Byrne, 'Mechanics's Institutes in Ireland before 1855' (thesis, University College Cork, 1976)
    • Richard Fawkes 'Dion Boucicault'
    • Norman McMillan 'Prometheus's Fire'
    • Mark Blaug (ed.) 'William Whewell (1794–1866), Dionysius Lardner (1793–1859), Charles Babbage (1792–1871)'; J.N. Hays article 'Dionysius Lardner' in the Dictionary of National Biography
    • Nora Crook's introduction to 'Mary Shelley's Literary Lives and other writings'
    • R. John Brockmann "Twisted Rails, sunken ships, the rhetoric of nineteenth century Steamboat and Railroad Accident Investigation Reports, 1833–1879" (2005).
    • Archives include Letters to Babbage, Letters in the Wellcome Library, including a 9-page autobiography in French, etc.
    • Peckham, Morse. "Dr. Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia". The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 45 (1951): 37–58.
    • Andrew Odlyzko "Collective hallucinations and inefficient markets: The British Railway Mania of the 1840s" (2010) [1]
  • Martin, A. L.; de Paor, Annraoi (25 May 2015). Villain of Steam: A Life of Dionysius Lardner (1793-1859). Tyndall Scientific. ISBN 978-0993242007.

References

  1. ^ a b c   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lardner, Dionysius". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 214.
  2. ^ a b c Hays, J. N. (2004). "Lardner, Dionysius (1793–1859), writer on science and public lecturer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/16068. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ "Dionysius Lardner". Computer History Museum.
  4. ^ Boylan, Henry (1998). A Dictionary of Irish Biography, 3rd Edition. Dublin: Gill and MacMillan. p. 215. ISBN 0-7171-2945-4.
  5. ^ a b c Christopher, John, "Brunel's Kingdom", 2006, Tempus Publishing Limited; ISBN 0-7524-3697-X
  6. ^ "THE COLONIST". 22 December 1838. p. 2 – via Trove.
  7. ^ John Brockmann "Twisted Rails, sunken ships, the rhetoric of nineteenth century Steamboat and Railroad Accident Investigation Reports, 1833–1879" New York, Baywood,2005 p. 41-73

External links

dionysius, lardner, frse, april, 1793, april, 1859, irish, scientific, writer, popularised, science, technology, edited, volume, cabinet, cyclopædia, born, 1793, april, 1793dublin, irelanddied29, april, 1859, 1859, aged, naples, kingdom, siciliesalma, matertri. Dionysius Lardner FRS FRSE 3 April 1793 29 April 1859 was an Irish scientific writer who popularised science and technology and edited the 133 volume Cabinet Cyclopaedia Dionysius LardnerDionysius LardnerBorn 1793 04 03 3 April 1793Dublin IrelandDied29 April 1859 1859 04 29 aged 66 Naples Kingdom of the Two SiciliesAlma materTrinity College DublinKnown forCabinet Cyclopedia Contents 1 Early life in Dublin 2 Career in London 3 Involvement in scandal 4 Disagreements with Brunel 5 Contemporary influence 6 Selected publications 7 Bibliography 8 References 9 External linksEarly life in Dublin EditHe was born in Dublin on 3 April 1793 the son of William Lardner a solicitor in Dublin who wished his son to follow the same calling After some years of uncongenial desk work Lardner entered Trinity College Dublin in 1812 and obtained a B A in 1817 1 and an M A in 1819 winning many prizes He married Cecilia Flood on 19 December 1815 but they separated in 1820 and were divorced in 1835 About the time of the separation he began a relationship with a married woman Anne Maria Darley Boursiquot the wife of a Dublin wine merchant It is believed that he fathered her son Dion Boucicault the actor and dramatist Lardner provided him with financial support until 1840 Whilst in Dublin Lardner began to write and lecture on scientific and mathematical matters and to contribute articles for publication by the Irish Academy 2 Career in London EditIn 1828 Lardner was elected professor of natural philosophy and astronomy at University College London a position he held until he resigned his professorship in 1831 citation needed Lardner showed himself to be a successful populariser of science giving talks on contemporary topics such as Babbage s Difference Engine 1834 3 He was the author of numerous mathematical and physical treatises on such subjects as algebraic geometry 1823 the differential and integral calculus 1825 and the steam engine 1828 He also wrote hand books on various departments of natural philosophy 1854 1856 but it is as the editor of Lardner s Cabinet Cyclopaedia 1830 1844 that he is best remembered citation needed The Cabinet Cyclopaedia eventually comprised 133 volumes and many of the ablest savants of the day contributed to it Sir Walter Scott contributed a history of Scotland and Thomas Moore contributed a history of Ireland Connop Thirlwall provided a history of Ancient Greece whilst Robert Southey provided a section on naval history Many eminent scientists contributed as well Lardner himself was the author of the treatises on arithmetic geometry heat hydrostatics and pneumatics mechanics in conjunction with Henry Kater and electricity in conjunction with C V Walker 2 The Cabinet Library 12 vols 1830 1832 and the Museum of Science and Art 12 vols 1854 1856 were his other chief undertakings A few original papers appear in the Royal Irish Academy s Transactions 1824 in the Royal Society s Proceedings 1831 1836 and in the Astronomical Society s Monthly Notices 1852 1853 and two Reports to the British Association on railway constants 1838 1841 are from his pen 1 Involvement in scandal EditIn 1840 Lardner s career received a major setback as a result of his involvement with Mary Spicer Heaviside the wife of Captain Richard Heaviside of the Dragoon Guards He had previously been married to Cecilia Flood in 1815 but had separated in 1820 Lardner ran off to Paris with Mrs Heaviside pursued by her husband When he caught up with them Heaviside subjected Lardner to a flogging he was unable to persuade his wife to return with him Later that year he successfully sued Lardner for criminal conversation adultery and received a judgment of 8 000 The Heavisides were divorced in 1845 and in 1846 Lardner was able to marry Mary Heaviside The scandal caused by his affair with a married woman effectively ended his career in England so Lardner and his wife remained in Paris until shortly before his death in 1859 He was able to maintain his career by lecturing in the United States between 1841 and 1844 which proved financially rewarding 2 realising 40 000 1 He died in Naples Italy and is buried in the Cimitero degli Inglesi there 4 Disagreements with Brunel EditLardner became involved in a number of ill advised public disagreements with Isambard Kingdom Brunel regarding technical matters in which he came off the worse citation needed During the 1833 Parliamentary hearings discussing the proposal of the Great Western Railway Lardner criticised Brunel s design of the Box Tunnel The tunnel had a 1 in 100 gradient from the east end to the west end Lardner asserted that if a train s brakes were to fail in the tunnel it would accelerate to over 120 mph 190 km h at which speed the train would break up and kill the passengers Brunel pointed out that Lardner s calculations totally disregarded air resistance and friction a basic error 5 In 1836 when Brunel was proposing to build SS Great Western for the 3 500 mi 5 600 km transatlantic passage to New York at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science Lardner stated that As the project of making the voyage directly from New York to Liverpool it was perfectly chimerical and they might as well talk of making the voyage from New York to the moon 2 080 mi 3 350 km is the longest run that a steamer could encounter at the end of that distance she would require a relay of coals Again Brunel was able to show that Lardner s calculations were too simplistic The principle that Brunel understood which Lardner did not was that the carrying capacity of a ship increases as the cube of its dimensions whilst the water resistance only increases as the square of its dimensions This meant that large ships were more fuel efficient and could carry sufficient coal for the long voyage across the Atlantic Brunel was proved right when the Great Western steamed into New York harbour with 200 long tons 200 tonnes of coal to spare 5 6 In 1838 while Brunel was building the broad gauge Great Western Railway Lardner carried out some experiments with the company s flagship locomotive North Star He asserted that whilst the engine was capable of hauling 82 long tons 83 tonnes at 33 mph 53 km h it was only capable of hauling 16 long tons 16 tonnes at 41 mph 66 km h He also recorded excessive fuel consumption at higher speeds Lardner attributed this to the greater wind resistance of broad gauge engines Brunel and his assistant Daniel Gooch carried out their own experiments on the same locomotive and found that the only problem was that the blast pipe was too small This was easily rectified and the North Star s performance immediately improved At the next meeting of the company s directors Brunel triumphantly dismissed Lardner s evidence 5 Contemporary influence EditLardner is mentioned in Karl Marx s Das Kapital and was well respected as an economist He mixed with the rich and famous He was involved in the founding of the University of London and was the first person to hold the post of Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy there He was influential in publicising Charles Babbage s Difference Engine Whilst lecturing in America Lardner was paid by Norris Brothers the largest firm of locomotive builders to investigate a fatal accident in Reading near Philadelphia where a boiler had exploded on a newly made train Lardner pronounced that the accident had been caused by lightning which meant that Norris Brothers were not personally liable for the accident A committee of the Franklin Institute pointed out that there was no lightning present at that time and that the pumps had been faulty the water indicator was ill designed and the bridge bands made of cast iron rather than wrought iron The Coroner s inquest jury were persuaded by Lardner that the accident was an act of God but the company were careful to design their later locomotives with wrought iron bands 7 Selected publications Edit 1828 Popular Lectures on the Steam Engine with James Renwick 1830 Mechanics with Captain Henry Kater 1830 The Western World Vol 1 United States 1831 Poland 1831 Treatise on Algebraic Geometry 1831 A Treatise on Mechanics Vol 1 with Captain Henry Kater 1831 A Treatise on Silk Manufacture 1832 Treatise on Hydrostatics and Pneumatics with Benjamin Franklin Joslin 1832 History of Switzerland with Roy Gerald Fitzgerald 1832 Lectures on the Steam engine 1834 An Historical View of the Progress of the Physical and Mathematical Sciences by Baden Powell 1836 The Steam Engine Familiarly Explained and Illustrated with James Renwick 1838 The History of Maritime and Inland Discovery Vol 3 1840 The Steam Engine Explained and Illustrated 1842 Courses of Lectures Delivered by Dionysius Lardner 1843 Lardner s Outlines of Universal History 1844 Investigation of the Causes of the Explosion of the Locomotive Engine Richmond 1845 Popular Lectures on Astronomy with Francois Arago 1847 Encyclopaedia of Pure Mathematics with Peter Barlow George Peacock 1848 The First Six Books of the Elements of Euclid 1849 Popular Lectures on Science and Art Vol 1 1850 Railway Economy 1854 Hand books of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy First Course 1855 Common Things Explained 1856 Steam and Its Uses 1857 A Rudimentary Treatise on the Steam Engine 1857 Natural Philosophy for Schools 1858 A Hand book of Optics 1858 Hand books of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy Vol 1Bibliography EditA L Martin Villain of Steam A Life of Dionysius Lardner 1793 1859 Carlow Tyndall Scientific 2015 References include Kieran Byrne Mechanics s Institutes in Ireland before 1855 thesis University College Cork 1976 Richard Fawkes Dion Boucicault Norman McMillan Prometheus s Fire Mark Blaug ed William Whewell 1794 1866 Dionysius Lardner 1793 1859 Charles Babbage 1792 1871 J N Hays article Dionysius Lardner in the Dictionary of National Biography Nora Crook s introduction to Mary Shelley s Literary Lives and other writings R John Brockmann Twisted Rails sunken ships the rhetoric of nineteenth century Steamboat and Railroad Accident Investigation Reports 1833 1879 2005 Archives include Letters to Babbage Letters in the Wellcome Library including a 9 page autobiography in French etc Peckham Morse Dr Lardner s Cabinet Cyclopaedia The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 45 1951 37 58 Andrew Odlyzko Collective hallucinations and inefficient markets The British Railway Mania of the 1840s 2010 1 Martin A L de Paor Annraoi 25 May 2015 Villain of Steam A Life of Dionysius Lardner 1793 1859 Tyndall Scientific ISBN 978 0993242007 References Edit a b c This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lardner Dionysius Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 214 a b c Hays J N 2004 Lardner Dionysius 1793 1859 writer on science and public lecturer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 16068 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Subscription or UK public library membership required Dionysius Lardner Computer History Museum Boylan Henry 1998 A Dictionary of Irish Biography 3rd Edition Dublin Gill and MacMillan p 215 ISBN 0 7171 2945 4 a b c Christopher John Brunel s Kingdom 2006 Tempus Publishing Limited ISBN 0 7524 3697 X THE COLONIST 22 December 1838 p 2 via Trove John Brockmann Twisted Rails sunken ships the rhetoric of nineteenth century Steamboat and Railroad Accident Investigation Reports 1833 1879 New York Baywood 2005 p 41 73External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Dionysius Lardner Works by Dionysius Lardner at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Dionysius Lardner at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dionysius Lardner amp oldid 1129791408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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