Marcus Graham Scroggie: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
1922 Graduated from Edinburgh University | 1922 Graduated from Edinburgh University | ||
Gained practical experience, in the still emerging technologies of radio and electronics, at [[Bruce Peebles and Co]] and [[Creed Telegraph]], before moving to [[Burndept|Burndept Wireless Co]] - one of the original constituents of the [[BBC|British Broadcasting Co]]. | Gained practical experience, in the still emerging technologies of radio and electronics, at [[Bruce Peebles and Co]] and [[Creed and Co|Creed Telegraph]], before moving to [[Burndept|Burndept Wireless Co]] - one of the original constituents of the [[BBC|British Broadcasting Co]]. | ||
He served in World War II in the Royal Air Force (RAF) in command of Pevensey Bay radar station in East Sussex and from there became a lecturer at the RAF Radio School at Yatesbury, Wiltshire, as well as being tasked by the Air Ministry to take charge of all RAF secret radar and radio publications. | He served in World War II in the Royal Air Force (RAF) in command of Pevensey Bay radar station in East Sussex and from there became a lecturer at the RAF Radio School at Yatesbury, Wiltshire, as well as being tasked by the Air Ministry to take charge of all RAF secret radar and radio publications. |
Latest revision as of 20:46, 8 January 2016
Marcus Graham Scroggie, B.Sc., F.I.E.E., (1901–1989) was a British technical author active in the fields of radio and electronics.
1901 Born in Leytonstone, Essex in 1901, the only child of the Baptist minister, writer and theologian Dr. W. Graham Scroggie.
1922 Graduated from Edinburgh University
Gained practical experience, in the still emerging technologies of radio and electronics, at Bruce Peebles and Co and Creed Telegraph, before moving to Burndept Wireless Co - one of the original constituents of the British Broadcasting Co.
He served in World War II in the Royal Air Force (RAF) in command of Pevensey Bay radar station in East Sussex and from there became a lecturer at the RAF Radio School at Yatesbury, Wiltshire, as well as being tasked by the Air Ministry to take charge of all RAF secret radar and radio publications.
After the War, he became a technical consultant and is known for more than 800 articles he contributed to 'Wireless World', often under the pseudonym 'Cathode Ray', as well as several books.
He died in 1989.
Though not as prolific a book writer as F. J. Camm, Scroggie is chiefly remembered for his seminal work, Foundations of Wireless [in later editions, … and Electronics]. Although this was originally written by A. L. M. Sowerby (and published in 1936 by Iliffe & Sons, London) its third edition of November 1941 was, 'Revised and enlarged by M.G. Scroggie B.Sc, M.I.E.E' and all subsequent editions bore Scroggie's name as author. An 11th revised edition was published by Newnes in 1997 as Scroggie's Foundations of Wireless & Electronics, revised by SW and RS Amos, ISBN 0-750-63430-8.
Nine editions of his Radio Laboratory Handbook, first published in 1939, later Radio and Electronic Laboratory Handbook, (last and 9th, 1980 edition co-authored by George Gordon Johnstone, ISBN 0-408-00373-1) were published.