John Gamgee: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
1889 Described himself as a physiologist. Presented a paper at the [[British Association]], reproduced in The Engineer, on "The Cardium", a heat-driven device consisting of a mixture of gas and liquid in a closed vessel. | 1889 Described himself as a physiologist. Presented a paper at the [[British Association]], reproduced in The Engineer, on "The Cardium", a heat-driven device consisting of a mixture of gas and liquid in a closed vessel. | ||
1890 Patent on improvement in steam boilers. | |||
1891 Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, lived in Wimbledon, with Adeline Gamgee 59<ref>1891 census</ref> | 1891 Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, lived in Wimbledon, with Adeline Gamgee 59<ref>1891 census</ref> |
Latest revision as of 16:37, 16 October 2017
c.1832 Born in Florence, a British subject, the son of Joseph Gamgee (1801-1895), a Scottish veterinary surgeon, and his wife, Mary Ann West. Dr Joseph Sampson Gamgee, a surgeon and pioneer of aseptic surgery, was his brother.
1861 Lived in Edinburgh, Doctor Of Veterinary Medicine and (Clerenery?) Surgeon, with Adeline Gamgee 29, Arthur Gamgee 19 (sic)[1]
Appointed by the Privy Council to study a problem in cattle, he identified the threat of rinderpest from imported Baltic cows.
1872 One of the secretaries of the department of anatomy and physiology of the Biology section of the British Association meeting.[2]
1876 He was the developer of the Glaciarium, the world's first mechanically-frozen ice rink.
He later became involved promoting refrigeration technology.
1889 Described himself as a physiologist. Presented a paper at the British Association, reproduced in The Engineer, on "The Cardium", a heat-driven device consisting of a mixture of gas and liquid in a closed vessel.
1890 Patent on improvement in steam boilers.
1891 Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, lived in Wimbledon, with Adeline Gamgee 59[3]
1892 of The Laboratory, 3, Church-street, Westminster, S.W.
1893 Applied for a patent on a motor with exhaust maintained below the temperature of the environment, using working fluids in a refrigeration cycle, and another on improvements in vapour condensers.
1894 Died
- Gamgee developed a "perpetual motion machine" known as the Zeromoter. The Zeromoter was intended to use ammonia within a refrigeration system to power ships. The technology gained the support of US President James Garfield, before being debunked.
See Also
Sources of Information
- Wikipedia [1]