Thomas Holmes Blakesley
Thomas Holmes Blakesley (1847-1929)
1847 Born in Ware, son of Joseph William Blakesley; John Holmes Blakesley was one of his younger brothers.
c.1868 Attended King's College, Cambridge[1]
1869-1872 Worked for Easton and Anderson where he learned to be a civil engineer[2]
1871 Gained M.A. at Cambridge
1873 Associate Member of Inst Civil Engineers[3]
1885 of Kensington. Became a Member of Inst Civil Engineers
1886-91 Assistant examiner in Experimental Philosophy at the University of London[4]
1891 Mr. T. H. Blakesley M.A. published an article on "Work done on Iron Cores in alternating current apparatus" in Nature.
1904 A patent on "A New Spectroscope of Direct Vision for a Given Ray of Light2
1929 Thomas H. Blakesley died in Kensington[5]