Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,701 pages of information and 247,104 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

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Sir Stephen Joseph Pigott (c1880-1955) of [[John Brown and Co]]
[[image:Im1955EnV199-p312.jpg |thumb| 1955. ]]
 
Sir Stephen J. Pigott (1880-1955), managing director of [[John Brown and Co]]
 
----
''' 1955 Obituary <ref>[[The Engineer 1955/03/04]]</ref>
 
THE news of the death of Sir Stephen
Pigott, which occurred on Sunday, February
27th, at his home, Closeburn Castle, Thornhill,
Dumfriesshire, will have been received
with considerable regret by marine engineers
in this country.
 
Sir Stephen, who became
resident in Great Britain in 1908, was born
on January 30, 1880, at Cornwall, in New
York State, and some 60 miles north of New
York.
 
He received his early education at the
High School in his home town and then
spent the next three years gaining engineering
experience with a number of firms, including
the Columbia Electric Vehicle Company
and the E. W. Bliss Machine Shop, Brooklyn,
before proceeding to Columbia University.
Here he studied mechanical and marine
engineering and took his degree in 1903.
 
During the following five years he acted as
assistant to Mr. Charles G. Curtis in the
development of the impulse turbine for
marine propulsion, and then in 1908 he was
invited by the Admiralty to come to Great
Britain. A few months after his arrival in
this country Stephen Pigott became associated
with [[John Brown and Co|John Brown and Co., Ltd.]], as a specialist
in impulse turbine work and so began his
connection with the famous Clydebank
firm which was to last for forty years until
his retirement in 1948. From his work on
the impulse turbine developed the Brown-Curtis
turbine, which was adopted by the
British Admiralty and was installed as the
main propelling unit for a number of
passenger liners engaged in the North Atlantic
and other services.
 
His promotion was rapid
and he became manager of the engine works,
and his value to the company was recognised
by his being appointed a local director in
1920. In the ensuing years, Sir Stephen
worked in close association with the late [[Thomas Bell (3)|Sir Thomas Bell]] and in 1934 he was made a full
director of the company, and then a year
later he succeeded Sir Thomas Bell as managing
director, a post which he continued to
hold until his retirement, due to ill health,
in October, 1948.
 
Many changes took place in marine
engineering theory and practice during the
period Sir Stephen was at Clydebank and he
was associated with and responsible for the
engines installed in a large number of naval
and merchant navy ships. Among such can
be mentioned the battle cruisers H.M.S.
"Tiger" and H.M.S. "Hood," the battleships
H.M.S. "Barham" and H.M.S. "Vanguard," the Canadian Pacific liner
"Empress of Britain," and that company's
"Duchess" class liners, and many Cunard
liners, including the "Aquitania," "Caronia"
and the "Queen Mary" and "Queen Elizabeth."
 
With regard to the construction
of the first of the large Cunard liners, he read
a paper before the Institution of Naval
Architects in 1937 entitled "Some Special Features of the 'Queen Mary.'"
 
Sir Stephen's energy and skill contributed greatly
to the progress made in marine engineering,
and his work was recognised when he was
awarded, in 1938, the Gold Medal of the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
for his outstanding leadership in marine
propulsion and construction. Two years
earlier his own university had recognised
the value of his work and conferred upon him
the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Science.
His distinguished services to the advancement
of engineering were rewarded when he
received a Knighthood in 1939, and in the
following year - 1940 - he received the
Parsons Medal. In connection with the
latter award, Sir Stephen delivered the
Parsons Memorial Lecture before the North-East
Coast Institution of Engineers and
Shipbuilders, taking as his subject "The Engining of Highly Powered Ships."
 
He was
an active member of many of the technical
societies, including the Institution of Mechanical
Engineers, the Institution of Naval
Architects, of which he was elected a vice-president
in 1941; the Institute of Marine
Engineers, of which he was president in
1937/8, and the Institution of Engineers and
Shipbuilders in Scotland.
 
From 1933 until
1952, Sir Stephen was a member of the
Technical Committee of Lloyd's Register of
Shipping, and he also served on the General
Committee from 1936 until he retired in
1952. He was a member of the Worshipful
Company of Shipwrights and a J .P. for
Glasgow, and his death will be keenly felt
by his many friends in the shipbuilding and
marine engineering industry.
----


----
----
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<references/>
<references/>


{{DEFAULTSORT: Pigott}}
{{DEFAULTSORT: Pigott, Stephen Joseph}}
[[Category: Biography]]
[[Category: Biography]]
[[Category: Biography - Marine]]
[[Category: Births 1880-1889]]
[[Category: Births 1880-1889]]
[[Category: Deaths 1950-1959]]
[[Category: Deaths 1950-1959]]
[[Category: Institution of Mechanical Engineers]]
[[Category: Institution of Mechanical Engineers]]
[[Category: Institution of Civil Engineers]]
[[Category: Institution of Civil Engineers]]

Latest revision as of 08:45, 22 April 2016

1955.

Sir Stephen J. Pigott (1880-1955), managing director of John Brown and Co


1955 Obituary [1]

THE news of the death of Sir Stephen Pigott, which occurred on Sunday, February 27th, at his home, Closeburn Castle, Thornhill, Dumfriesshire, will have been received with considerable regret by marine engineers in this country.

Sir Stephen, who became resident in Great Britain in 1908, was born on January 30, 1880, at Cornwall, in New York State, and some 60 miles north of New York.

He received his early education at the High School in his home town and then spent the next three years gaining engineering experience with a number of firms, including the Columbia Electric Vehicle Company and the E. W. Bliss Machine Shop, Brooklyn, before proceeding to Columbia University. Here he studied mechanical and marine engineering and took his degree in 1903.

During the following five years he acted as assistant to Mr. Charles G. Curtis in the development of the impulse turbine for marine propulsion, and then in 1908 he was invited by the Admiralty to come to Great Britain. A few months after his arrival in this country Stephen Pigott became associated with John Brown and Co., Ltd., as a specialist in impulse turbine work and so began his connection with the famous Clydebank firm which was to last for forty years until his retirement in 1948. From his work on the impulse turbine developed the Brown-Curtis turbine, which was adopted by the British Admiralty and was installed as the main propelling unit for a number of passenger liners engaged in the North Atlantic and other services.

His promotion was rapid and he became manager of the engine works, and his value to the company was recognised by his being appointed a local director in 1920. In the ensuing years, Sir Stephen worked in close association with the late Sir Thomas Bell and in 1934 he was made a full director of the company, and then a year later he succeeded Sir Thomas Bell as managing director, a post which he continued to hold until his retirement, due to ill health, in October, 1948.

Many changes took place in marine engineering theory and practice during the period Sir Stephen was at Clydebank and he was associated with and responsible for the engines installed in a large number of naval and merchant navy ships. Among such can be mentioned the battle cruisers H.M.S. "Tiger" and H.M.S. "Hood," the battleships H.M.S. "Barham" and H.M.S. "Vanguard," the Canadian Pacific liner "Empress of Britain," and that company's "Duchess" class liners, and many Cunard liners, including the "Aquitania," "Caronia" and the "Queen Mary" and "Queen Elizabeth."

With regard to the construction of the first of the large Cunard liners, he read a paper before the Institution of Naval Architects in 1937 entitled "Some Special Features of the 'Queen Mary.'"

Sir Stephen's energy and skill contributed greatly to the progress made in marine engineering, and his work was recognised when he was awarded, in 1938, the Gold Medal of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers for his outstanding leadership in marine propulsion and construction. Two years earlier his own university had recognised the value of his work and conferred upon him the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Science. His distinguished services to the advancement of engineering were rewarded when he received a Knighthood in 1939, and in the following year - 1940 - he received the Parsons Medal. In connection with the latter award, Sir Stephen delivered the Parsons Memorial Lecture before the North-East Coast Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders, taking as his subject "The Engining of Highly Powered Ships."

He was an active member of many of the technical societies, including the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Institution of Naval Architects, of which he was elected a vice-president in 1941; the Institute of Marine Engineers, of which he was president in 1937/8, and the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland.

From 1933 until 1952, Sir Stephen was a member of the Technical Committee of Lloyd's Register of Shipping, and he also served on the General Committee from 1936 until he retired in 1952. He was a member of the Worshipful Company of Shipwrights and a J .P. for Glasgow, and his death will be keenly felt by his many friends in the shipbuilding and marine engineering industry.



1956 Obituary [2]

Sir Stephen Joseph Pigott, D.Sc., was educated at High School, Cornwall, New York, and Columbia University, where he obtained a degree in mechanical and marine engineering. Meantime, during vacations, he was engaged with Columbia Electric Vehicle Co. for three years, and subsequently worked in New York for five years as an assistant on the development of impulse turbines for ship propulsion.

In 1908 he came to Britain at the invitation of the Admiralty, and shortly became associated with John Brown and Co., Clydebank, as a specialist on the development work mentioned above. Later he occupied several executive positions before being appointed, in 1938, as Managing Director, responsible, until 1949, for all activities and management of the Clydebank works. He was knighted in 1939.

He was elected a Member of the Institution in 1944, and he was also a Member of the Institutions of Civil Engineers and Naval Architects, and of the Institute of Marine Engineers, of which he was President in 1937-38. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers awarded him a Medal for outstanding leadership in marine propulsion and construction in 1938.

His death took place at the age of seventy-five on 27th February 1955.


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