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Lancelot de Mole

Lancelot Eldin "Lance" de Mole[1] CBE, (13 March 1880 – 6 May 1950) was an Australian engineer and inventor.[2]

Lancelot Eldin de Mole
Lance de Mole (1910)
Born(1880-03-13)13 March 1880
Died6 May 1950(1950-05-06) (aged 70)
NationalityAustralian
Occupation(s)Mechanical engineer and inventor
Known forPremature design of the tank
Signature

He made several approaches to the British authorities, in 1912, 1914, and 1916, with plans for a vehicle driven by a type of caterpillar track, believing that it could have a military application. It was ahead of its time because in 1912 the need for such a military device had not yet arisen. To further complicate matters his correspondence was set aside due to various bureaucratic blunders, and was not given to the appropriate officers.

In 1919, three years after the first military tanks had been built and used in warfare during World War I, a Royal Commission acknowledged the potential of de Mole's innovative vehicle. The commission noted the unfortunate consequences of his submissions being overlooked, and that while his designs had no influence on the actual development of the tank, tanks might have been developed much earlier if his idea had been properly investigated.

Family

 
The de Mole family at tea, c.1896s: left to right: Florence, Mrs. de Mole, Clive, Gladys, Lance, Winifred, and Mr. de Mole, foreground.

The eldest of the five children of William Frederick de Mole (1852–1939),[3] an architect and surveyor, and Emily de Mole (1858–1941), née Moulden,[4][5] Lancelot Eldin de Mole was born in Willunga, South Australia, on 13 March 1880.

Siblings

He had three sisters and one brother: Florence Louise de Mole (1881–1966) (later Mrs. Feldtmann),[6] Winifred Emily de Mole (1886–1903),[7] Clive Moulden de Mole (1886–1934),[8] and Gladys Rose de Mole (1887–1979).[9]

His younger brother, Clive, enlisted in the First Australian Imperial Force on 9 September 1914.[10] He was wounded in action in the Dardanelles on 28 June 1915, receiving a gunshot wound and a fracture to his left arm, and was invalided back to Australia in March 1916. He was promoted to Second Lieutenant on 1 January 1919,[11] and to Lieutenant on 1 April 1919. He was discharged from the AIF in the U.K. in September 1919.[12]

Wife

He married Harriet Josephine Walter (1890–1957) on 21 July 1915.[13]

Education

His family moved to Victoria when he was 7 years old, and he was educated at the Melbourne Church of England Grammar School until 1891, and then at the Berwick Grammar School. After leaving school he trained as an engineering draftsman.

Inventions

He was a prolific inventor; and a number of his inventions were patented.

U.S. patents

  • US patent no.1,408,569, (held by Lancelot Eldin de Mole), dated 7 March 1922 (filed 4 March 1920), for a "Road Vehicle".[2]
  • US patent no.1,448,056, (held by Lancelot Eldin de Mole), dated 13 March 1923 (filed 17 July 1920), for a "Differential or Balance Gear".[3]
  • US patent no.1,737,573, (held by Lancelot Eldin de Mole), dated 3 December 1929 (filed 14 March 1925), for a "Changing Sign and Display Apparatus".[4]

Applications for Australian patents

  • 1902: Australasian Mining Patents: Oylndrical ore concentrator, West Australia, February 7. No.3723 — L. E. de Mole, Kalgoorlie, W.A.
  • 1902: Australasian Mining Patents: Concentrator — L. E. de Mole, Brighton, Victoria: A cylindrical ore concentrator. Victoria, May 14, No.19,079.
  • 1902: Inventions and Patents: An improved method of and apparatus for automatically operating telephone exchanges (provisional); No.7898; application made week ending 30 August 1902.

The tank

 
de Mole's scale model at AWM

Inspired by the uncomfortable experience of travelling over rough terrain in the Western Australian countryside in 1911,[14] de Mole developed, and then submitted an idea of a tracked armoured fighting vehicle ("chain-rail vehicle which could be easily steered and carry heavy loads over rough ground and trenches") to the British War Office in 1912; in June 1913 he received a reply that his idea had been rejected.

A model of his tank is displayed at the Australian War Memorial, Canberra.

He wrote to the British Munitions Inventions Department on 19 June 1919 seeking remuneration for the expenses he had incurred in submitting his invention to the Department for use during the war.[15]

de Mole's formal claim

Royal Commission on Awards to Inventors

The British Royal Commission on Awards to Inventors, conducted by Mr Justice Sargant, investigated the claims of twelve persons (10 individuals, including de Mole, and one pair) relating to the invention of tanks, delivered its findings and recommendations on 27 November 1919.[16]

The commission's Report announced that "in estimating the value of the invention of the Tanks for the purpose of [our] recommendations, we have taken into account not merely the precise class of Tanks which went into action at the Battle of the Somme, but also any modified or improved classes of Tanks which may fairly be considered to result from the normal development of the inherent potentialities of the original invention". Notwithstanding this, however, the Report continued, "we have not taken into account any special or exceptional inventions which may subsequently have been applied and have resulted in substantial extra utility".[16]

Winston Churchill

Before anything else, the Commissioner registered his view that, "the general idea of the use of such an instrument of warfare as the "Tank" was converted into a practical shape ... was primarily due to the receptivity, courage, and driving force of Mr. Winston Churchill"; and, as well, that it should be placed on record that Churchill had made no claim, because "Mr. Churchill has very properly taken the view that all his thought and time belonged to the State, and that he was not entitled to make any claim for an award, even had he wished to do so".[16]

 
    The Times, 28 November 1919, p.12.

Commission's awards

Sir William Tritton and Major W.G. Wilson were jointly awarded £15,000, and were recognized for "designing and producing a concrete practical shape the novel and efficient engine of warfare known as the "Tank""; the Commissioner emphasized that the considerable design difficulties that were experienced when the tanks took the field of action, which were rapidly remedied, were a consequence of inadequate specifications by the government, and were not due to any design faults on the part of Tritton or Wilson.[16]

Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt, the Director of Naval Construction and Chairman of the Landships Committee, and Major-General E.D. Swinton were each awarded £1,000, for their work in advocating the overall concept, setting design specifications, and overseeing the project.[16]

Mr. Albert Collinson Nesfield[17] and Lieutenant Robert Francis Macfie[18] were each awarded £500 for the separate and independent "conception, embodiment, and communication of the same set of ideas".[16]

Commission's rejection

The Royal Commission rejected the claims of Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Lewis Maitland Boothby,[19] Commodore M.F. Sueter, Major Thomas Gerard Hetherington — the separate claims of Boothby, Sueter, and Hetherington were rejected on the grounds that the important services that they had rendered came within the scope of their military employment[16] — and that of Colonel R.E.B. Crompton and his assistant Mr. Lucien Alphonse Legros,[20] on the basis that they had "worked loyally and very hard" at their allotted tasks, they had been well-paid as consulting engineers, and had neither invented nor discovered any of the special features that were ultimately incorporated in the tanks.[16]

In de Mole's case, however, the commission's Report was far more sympathetic:

The case of this claimant was heard a few days after the conclusion of the other cases. We consider that he is entitled to the greatest credit for having made and reduced to practical shape as far back as the year 1912 a very brilliant invention which anticipated and in some respects surpassed that actually put into use in the year 1916. It was this claimant's misfortune and not his fault that his invention was in advance of his time, and failed to be appreciated and was put aside because the occasion for its use had not then arisen. We regret exceedingly that we are unable to recommend any award to him. But we are bound to adhere to the general rule in such cases as these that a claimant must show a causal connexion between the making of his invention and the user of any similar invention by the Government.[16]

Reward

The commission finally recognised the brilliance of de Mole's design, even declaring that it was superior to the machines actually developed, but because of its narrow remit the commission was unable to recommend an award. However, de Mole was told that if he were to make a claim for out-of-pocket expenses, it would be regarded favourably. He was asked to supply a detailed statement of his expenditure on the project, and was reimbursed in the sum of £987 (about £50,000 2019 value).[21][22]

He was made an honorary corporal in 1919; and, early in 1920, it was announced from London that he had been appointed a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE).[23]

At the formal investiture of the award, on 28 July 1921, in the ballroom of the New South Wales' State Government House, Lord Forster, the seventh Governor-General of Australia, was so nervous that he dropped the decoration before it could be pinned on de Mole's chest.[24]

Post-war

After the war, de Mole made his case to the Australian government. Inquiries from that government to the British one yielded little but polite responses that Mr de Mole's ideas had unfortunately been too advanced for their time and thus were not recognized as they should have been.

Employment

After the war de Mole became an engineer in the design branch of the Sydney Water Board.

Death

He died at Liverpool, New South Wales, on 6 May 1950.[25][26][27]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Although in some records, and in some newspaper accounts, his family name, de Mole, might appear in the form of De Mole, deMole, Demole, or DeMole, both Lance and his brother Clive always signed their family name as "de Mole": see the signatures throughout their respective Service Records.
  2. ^ Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  3. ^ Deaths: De Mole, The Argus, (Saturday, 12 August 1939), p.8.
  4. ^ Married: DeMole—Moulden, The South Australian Advertiser, (Saturday, 22 March 1879), p.4.
  5. ^ Deaths: DeMole, The (Adelaide) Chronicle, (Thursday, 14 August 1941), p.18.
  6. ^ Perth Prattle: Matrimonial, The (Perth) Sunday Times, (Sunday, 20 August 1911), p.26.
  7. ^ Special Notice: Deaths: De Mole, The (Adelaide) Register, (Saturday 21 March 1903), p.4.
  8. ^ Family Notices: Deaths: de Mole, The West Australian, (Thursday, 22 March 1934), p.1.
  9. ^ Births: De Mole, The Argus, (Saturday, 27 August 1887), p.1.
  10. ^ He was given Service Number 2518.
  11. ^ Thus, no longer requiring a Service Number.
  12. ^ National Archives of Australia: World War I Service Record: Clive Moulden de Mole (7478).
  13. ^ Family Notices: Weddings: de Mole—Walter, The (Adelaide) Mail, (Saturday, 24 July 1915), p.13.
  14. ^ Buckboard Jolt: Inspiration for Tank, Townsville Daily Bulletin, (Monday, 19 May 1941), p.3.
  15. ^ de Mole's carbon copy of the letter, appended, in his own writing, to the effect that his request was denied, is held by the South Australian State Library in its "SA Memory" collection. ([1])
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i The Times, (28 November 1919), p.14.
  17. ^ U.S. Patent No.2369245: Internal-Combustion Engine (Filed 18 February 1944; issued 13 February 1945.
  18. ^ U.S. Patent No.129836: Self-Propelled Vehicle (Filed 4 September 1917; issued 25 March 1919.
  19. ^ US Patent No.1549570: Airship (filed on 8 April 1924; issued on 11 Aug 1925).
  20. ^ US Patent No.1030399: Machine for Cutting Punches and Like Master Metal Surfaces (John Cameron Grant and ucien Alphonse Legros), (Filed on 27 October 1910; issued on 25 June 1912).
  21. ^ https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/1924-06-19/debates/c62e40a8-c5d2-4fa1-a2cb-a61f9e580a54/WarInventionsClaims[bare URL]
  22. ^ Williams, 1933.
  23. ^ British Empire Order: Honours for War Service: Commanders (C.B.E.), The Argus, (Saturday 3 April 1920), p.11. Note: the newspaper's embarrassing confusion in military rank between "Honorary Corporal" Lancelot Eldin de Mole, and his brother, "Lieutenant Clive Moulden de Mole".
  24. ^ Concerning People, The (Adelaide) Register, (Tuesday, 9 August 1921), p.8.
  25. ^ Family Notices: Deaths: De Mole, The Sydney Morning Herald, (Monday, 8 May 1950), p.16.
  26. ^ Personal, The West Australian, (Tuesday, 9 May 1950), p.2.
  27. ^ Death of Tank Inventor, Construction, (Wednesday, 24 May 1950), p.5.

References

  • Anderson, A.T., "The War Museum: Some Impressions: The Tank Australian", The Sydney Morning Herald, (Saturday, 18 April 1925), p. 16. [5]
  • Australian's Rejected Invention, The (Melbourne) Herald, (Saturday, 21 May 1921), p.1.
  • Day, Lance; McNeil, Ian (2003). Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology. Taylor & Francis. p. 494. ISBN 978-0-203-02829-2.
  • Gray, E.D. (1924a), "Story of the Tanks: de Mole's Remarkable Invention: War Office Ineptitude", The West Australian, (Monday, 11 August 1924), p.8.
  • Gray, E.D. (1924b), "Story of the Tanks; De Mole's Travelling Caterpillar Fort; Remarkable Letter From Perth in 1914", The Argus, (Saturday, 9 August 1924), p.6.
  • Williams, G.M., "Letter to the Editor: Military Tanks", The Sydney Morning Herald, (Tuesday, 13 June 1933), p.8.
Williams' letter, containing important, significant, and hitherto unknown facts was written in direct response to a small article that had been published on the previous day: War Tank: An Australian Invention: Rejected in 1911, The Sydney Morning Herald, (Monday, 12 June 1933), p.9.
  • Awards to Tank Inventors: Royal Commission's Report: Mr. Churchill's "Driving Force", The Times, No.42269, (Friday, 28 November 1919), p. 14, col.D.
  • Awards to Tank Inventors, The (Adelaide) Register, (Thursday, 29 January 1920), p.6.
  • Australia to the Fore: Invention of the War Tank, The (Adelaide) Register, (Thursday, 12 February 1920), p.7.
  • Concerning People: Corporal L. E. De Mole, The (Adelaide) Register, (Saturday, 28 February 1920), p.8.
  • Investiture: by Lord Foster: Ceremony at Government House: C.B.E. ("Mr Lancelot E. de Mole, for services respecting the invention of military tanks"), The Sydney Morning Herald, (Friday, 29 July 1921), p.8.
  • Institution of Engineers, The Sydney Morning Herald, (Friday ,13 April 1923), p.10.
  • Tank Inventor: Corporal De Mole: Early Arrival Expected, Cairns Post, (Thursday 26 February 1920), p.8.

External links

  • National Archives of Australia: World War I Service Record: Lancelot Eldin de Mole (7478).
  • Australian Dictionary of Biography – de Mole, Lancelot Eldin (1880–1950)
  • DeMole "Design not passed on" (Article on WWI tank development; included pics of Demole and sketch of tank).
  • Australian War Memorial: Passport photograph of Mr. Lancelot Eldin de Mole (c.1916).
  • Australian War Memorial: Full length studio portrait of Private Lancelot Eldin de Mole (7478), in 1917.

lancelot, mole, lancelot, eldin, lance, mole, march, 1880, 1950, australian, engineer, inventor, lancelot, eldin, molelance, mole, 1910, born, 1880, march, 1880adelaide, south, australia, australiadied6, 1950, 1950, aged, liverpool, south, wales, australianati. Lancelot Eldin Lance de Mole 1 CBE 13 March 1880 6 May 1950 was an Australian engineer and inventor 2 Lancelot Eldin de MoleLance de Mole 1910 Born 1880 03 13 13 March 1880Adelaide South Australia AustraliaDied6 May 1950 1950 05 06 aged 70 Liverpool New South Wales AustraliaNationalityAustralianOccupation s Mechanical engineer and inventorKnown forPremature design of the tankSignatureHe made several approaches to the British authorities in 1912 1914 and 1916 with plans for a vehicle driven by a type of caterpillar track believing that it could have a military application It was ahead of its time because in 1912 the need for such a military device had not yet arisen To further complicate matters his correspondence was set aside due to various bureaucratic blunders and was not given to the appropriate officers In 1919 three years after the first military tanks had been built and used in warfare during World War I a Royal Commission acknowledged the potential of de Mole s innovative vehicle The commission noted the unfortunate consequences of his submissions being overlooked and that while his designs had no influence on the actual development of the tank tanks might have been developed much earlier if his idea had been properly investigated Contents 1 Family 1 1 Siblings 1 2 Wife 2 Education 3 Inventions 3 1 U S patents 3 2 Applications for Australian patents 4 The tank 4 1 de Mole s formal claim 4 1 1 Royal Commission on Awards to Inventors 4 1 2 Winston Churchill 4 1 3 Commission s awards 4 1 4 Commission s rejection 4 1 5 Reward 4 1 6 Post war 5 Employment 6 Death 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksFamily Edit The de Mole family at tea c 1896s left to right Florence Mrs de Mole Clive Gladys Lance Winifred and Mr de Mole foreground The eldest of the five children of William Frederick de Mole 1852 1939 3 an architect and surveyor and Emily de Mole 1858 1941 nee Moulden 4 5 Lancelot Eldin de Mole was born in Willunga South Australia on 13 March 1880 Siblings Edit He had three sisters and one brother Florence Louise de Mole 1881 1966 later Mrs Feldtmann 6 Winifred Emily de Mole 1886 1903 7 Clive Moulden de Mole 1886 1934 8 and Gladys Rose de Mole 1887 1979 9 His younger brother Clive enlisted in the First Australian Imperial Force on 9 September 1914 10 He was wounded in action in the Dardanelles on 28 June 1915 receiving a gunshot wound and a fracture to his left arm and was invalided back to Australia in March 1916 He was promoted to Second Lieutenant on 1 January 1919 11 and to Lieutenant on 1 April 1919 He was discharged from the AIF in the U K in September 1919 12 Wife Edit He married Harriet Josephine Walter 1890 1957 on 21 July 1915 13 Education EditHis family moved to Victoria when he was 7 years old and he was educated at the Melbourne Church of England Grammar School until 1891 and then at the Berwick Grammar School After leaving school he trained as an engineering draftsman Inventions EditHe was a prolific inventor and a number of his inventions were patented U S patents Edit US patent no 1 408 569 held by Lancelot Eldin de Mole dated 7 March 1922 filed 4 March 1920 for a Road Vehicle 2 US patent no 1 448 056 held by Lancelot Eldin de Mole dated 13 March 1923 filed 17 July 1920 for a Differential or Balance Gear 3 US patent no 1 737 573 held by Lancelot Eldin de Mole dated 3 December 1929 filed 14 March 1925 for a Changing Sign and Display Apparatus 4 Applications for Australian patents Edit 1902 Australasian Mining Patents Oylndrical ore concentrator West Australia February 7 No 3723 L E de Mole Kalgoorlie W A 1902 Australasian Mining Patents Concentrator L E de Mole Brighton Victoria A cylindrical ore concentrator Victoria May 14 No 19 079 1902 Inventions and Patents An improved method of and apparatus for automatically operating telephone exchanges provisional No 7898 application made week ending 30 August 1902 The tank Edit de Mole s scale model at AWM Inspired by the uncomfortable experience of travelling over rough terrain in the Western Australian countryside in 1911 14 de Mole developed and then submitted an idea of a tracked armoured fighting vehicle chain rail vehicle which could be easily steered and carry heavy loads over rough ground and trenches to the British War Office in 1912 in June 1913 he received a reply that his idea had been rejected A model of his tank is displayed at the Australian War Memorial Canberra He wrote to the British Munitions Inventions Department on 19 June 1919 seeking remuneration for the expenses he had incurred in submitting his invention to the Department for use during the war 15 de Mole s formal claim Edit Royal Commission on Awards to Inventors Edit The British Royal Commission on Awards to Inventors conducted by Mr Justice Sargant investigated the claims of twelve persons 10 individuals including de Mole and one pair relating to the invention of tanks delivered its findings and recommendations on 27 November 1919 16 The commission s Report announced that in estimating the value of the invention of the Tanks for the purpose of our recommendations we have taken into account not merely the precise class of Tanks which went into action at the Battle of the Somme but also any modified or improved classes of Tanks which may fairly be considered to result from the normal development of the inherent potentialities of the original invention Notwithstanding this however the Report continued we have not taken into account any special or exceptional inventions which may subsequently have been applied and have resulted in substantial extra utility 16 Winston Churchill Edit Before anything else the Commissioner registered his view that the general idea of the use of such an instrument of warfare as the Tank was converted into a practical shape was primarily due to the receptivity courage and driving force of Mr Winston Churchill and as well that it should be placed on record that Churchill had made no claim because Mr Churchill has very properly taken the view that all his thought and time belonged to the State and that he was not entitled to make any claim for an award even had he wished to do so 16 The Times 28 November 1919 p 12 Commission s awards Edit Sir William Tritton and Major W G Wilson were jointly awarded 15 000 and were recognized for designing and producing a concrete practical shape the novel and efficient engine of warfare known as the Tank the Commissioner emphasized that the considerable design difficulties that were experienced when the tanks took the field of action which were rapidly remedied were a consequence of inadequate specifications by the government and were not due to any design faults on the part of Tritton or Wilson 16 Sir Eustace Tennyson d Eyncourt the Director of Naval Construction and Chairman of the Landships Committee and Major General E D Swinton were each awarded 1 000 for their work in advocating the overall concept setting design specifications and overseeing the project 16 Mr Albert Collinson Nesfield 17 and Lieutenant Robert Francis Macfie 18 were each awarded 500 for the separate and independent conception embodiment and communication of the same set of ideas 16 Commission s rejection Edit The Royal Commission rejected the claims of Lieutenant Colonel Frederick Lewis Maitland Boothby 19 Commodore M F Sueter Major Thomas Gerard Hetherington the separate claims of Boothby Sueter and Hetherington were rejected on the grounds that the important services that they had rendered came within the scope of their military employment 16 and that of Colonel R E B Crompton and his assistant Mr Lucien Alphonse Legros 20 on the basis that they had worked loyally and very hard at their allotted tasks they had been well paid as consulting engineers and had neither invented nor discovered any of the special features that were ultimately incorporated in the tanks 16 In de Mole s case however the commission s Report was far more sympathetic The case of this claimant was heard a few days after the conclusion of the other cases We consider that he is entitled to the greatest credit for having made and reduced to practical shape as far back as the year 1912 a very brilliant invention which anticipated and in some respects surpassed that actually put into use in the year 1916 It was this claimant s misfortune and not his fault that his invention was in advance of his time and failed to be appreciated and was put aside because the occasion for its use had not then arisen We regret exceedingly that we are unable to recommend any award to him But we are bound to adhere to the general rule in such cases as these that a claimant must show a causal connexion between the making of his invention and the user of any similar invention by the Government 16 Reward Edit The commission finally recognised the brilliance of de Mole s design even declaring that it was superior to the machines actually developed but because of its narrow remit the commission was unable to recommend an award However de Mole was told that if he were to make a claim for out of pocket expenses it would be regarded favourably He was asked to supply a detailed statement of his expenditure on the project and was reimbursed in the sum of 987 about 50 000 2019 value 21 22 He was made an honorary corporal in 1919 and early in 1920 it was announced from London that he had been appointed a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire CBE 23 At the formal investiture of the award on 28 July 1921 in the ballroom of the New South Wales State Government House Lord Forster the seventh Governor General of Australia was so nervous that he dropped the decoration before it could be pinned on de Mole s chest 24 Post war Edit After the war de Mole made his case to the Australian government Inquiries from that government to the British one yielded little but polite responses that Mr de Mole s ideas had unfortunately been too advanced for their time and thus were not recognized as they should have been Employment EditAfter the war de Mole became an engineer in the design branch of the Sydney Water Board Death EditHe died at Liverpool New South Wales on 6 May 1950 25 26 27 See also EditGunther Burstyn History of the tank Landship Committee Royal Commission on Awards to InventorsFootnotes Edit Although in some records and in some newspaper accounts his family name de Mole might appear in the form of De Mole deMole Demole or DeMole both Lance and his brother Clive always signed their family name as de Mole see the signatures throughout their respective Service Records Australian Dictionary of Biography Deaths De Mole The Argus Saturday 12 August 1939 p 8 Married DeMole Moulden The South Australian Advertiser Saturday 22 March 1879 p 4 Deaths DeMole The Adelaide Chronicle Thursday 14 August 1941 p 18 Perth Prattle Matrimonial The Perth Sunday Times Sunday 20 August 1911 p 26 Special Notice Deaths De Mole The Adelaide Register Saturday 21 March 1903 p 4 Family Notices Deaths de Mole The West Australian Thursday 22 March 1934 p 1 Births De Mole The Argus Saturday 27 August 1887 p 1 He was given Service Number 2518 Thus no longer requiring a Service Number National Archives of Australia World War I Service Record Clive Moulden de Mole 7478 Family Notices Weddings de Mole Walter The Adelaide Mail Saturday 24 July 1915 p 13 Buckboard Jolt Inspiration for Tank Townsville Daily Bulletin Monday 19 May 1941 p 3 de Mole s carbon copy of the letter appended in his own writing to the effect that his request was denied is held by the South Australian State Library in its SA Memory collection 1 a b c d e f g h i The Times 28 November 1919 p 14 U S Patent No 2369245 Internal Combustion Engine Filed 18 February 1944 issued 13 February 1945 U S Patent No 129836 Self Propelled Vehicle Filed 4 September 1917 issued 25 March 1919 US Patent No 1549570 Airship filed on 8 April 1924 issued on 11 Aug 1925 US Patent No 1030399 Machine for Cutting Punches and Like Master Metal Surfaces John Cameron Grant and ucien Alphonse Legros Filed on 27 October 1910 issued on 25 June 1912 https hansard parliament uk Commons 1924 06 19 debates c62e40a8 c5d2 4fa1 a2cb a61f9e580a54 WarInventionsClaims bare URL Williams 1933 British Empire Order Honours for War Service Commanders C B E The Argus Saturday 3 April 1920 p 11 Note the newspaper s embarrassing confusion in military rank between Honorary Corporal Lancelot Eldin de Mole and his brother Lieutenant Clive Moulden de Mole Concerning People The Adelaide Register Tuesday 9 August 1921 p 8 Family Notices Deaths De Mole The Sydney Morning Herald Monday 8 May 1950 p 16 Personal The West Australian Tuesday 9 May 1950 p 2 Death of Tank Inventor Construction Wednesday 24 May 1950 p 5 References EditAnderson A T The War Museum Some Impressions The Tank Australian The Sydney Morning Herald Saturday 18 April 1925 p 16 5 Australian s Rejected Invention The Melbourne Herald Saturday 21 May 1921 p 1 Day Lance McNeil Ian 2003 Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology Taylor amp Francis p 494 ISBN 978 0 203 02829 2 Gray E D 1924a Story of the Tanks de Mole s Remarkable Invention War Office Ineptitude The West Australian Monday 11 August 1924 p 8 Gray E D 1924b Story of the Tanks De Mole s Travelling Caterpillar Fort Remarkable Letter From Perth in 1914 The Argus Saturday 9 August 1924 p 6 Williams G M Letter to the Editor Military Tanks The Sydney Morning Herald Tuesday 13 June 1933 p 8 Williams letter containing important significant and hitherto unknown facts was written in direct response to a small article that had been published on the previous day War Tank An Australian Invention Rejected in 1911 The Sydney Morning Herald Monday 12 June 1933 p 9 dd Awards to Tank Inventors Royal Commission s Report Mr Churchill s Driving Force The Times No 42269 Friday 28 November 1919 p 14 col D Awards to Tank Inventors The Adelaide Register Thursday 29 January 1920 p 6 Australia to the Fore Invention of the War Tank The Adelaide Register Thursday 12 February 1920 p 7 Concerning People Corporal L E De Mole The Adelaide Register Saturday 28 February 1920 p 8 Investiture by Lord Foster Ceremony at Government House C B E Mr Lancelot E de Mole for services respecting the invention of military tanks The Sydney Morning Herald Friday 29 July 1921 p 8 Institution of Engineers The Sydney Morning Herald Friday 13 April 1923 p 10 Tank Inventor Corporal De Mole Early Arrival Expected Cairns Post Thursday 26 February 1920 p 8 External links EditNational Archives of Australia World War I Service Record Lancelot Eldin de Mole 7478 Australian Dictionary of Biography de Mole Lancelot Eldin 1880 1950 DeMole Design not passed on Article on WWI tank development included pics of Demole and sketch of tank Australian War Memorial Passport photograph of Mr Lancelot Eldin de Mole c 1916 Australian War Memorial Full length studio portrait of Private Lancelot Eldin de Mole 7478 in 1917 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lancelot de Mole amp oldid 1118686336, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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