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 162,254 pages of information and 244,496 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

William Peter Durtnall

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William Peter Durtnall (1873–1947), M.I.Mar.E., M.I.Auto.E., M.I.Loco.E, was a British electrical engineer and inventor, and a Captain in the Royal Air Force. He was involved in both marine and locomotive engineering and invented a thermo-electric engine patented as the "Paragon". Durtnall transferred from the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve to a temporary commission as a Captain in the Royal Air Force in April 1918.

1873 Born in Herne Bay, Kent,and baptised there on 2 February 1873, the son of William J. Durtnall, a mariner before marriage and later became a car-man on the railway. His mother Elizabeth, ran a lodging house and his grandfather had been a sail-maker at Chatham Dockyard.

1881 Living at 22 High Street, Herne, Kent: William J. Durtnall (age 38 born Chatham), a Goods Porter on the Railway. With his wife Elizabeth Durtnall (age 35 born Sandwich) and their children; William P. Durtnall (age 8 born Herne Bay); Arthur E Durtnall (age 6 born Herne Bay); Alfred H. Durtnall (age 5 born Herne Bay); and Berta F. Durtnall (age 2 born Herne Bay).[1]

Durtnall was apprenticed to Willans and Robinson, where he was involved in a junior position in work relating to the Heilmann steam locomotives.

1886 Joined the Herne Bay Electric Light Co.

He then served at the Maxim-Weston Electric Co at Dalston under W. J. L. Hamilton, Engineer for both companies, until 1890.

1893 He was elected an Associate of the Institution of Electrical Engineers

The Herne Bay Electric Light Co. appears never to have been formally registered. It was promoted by a firm called Shippy Bros, backed by the Universal Electric Light Co. and Durtnall (along with other employees) was not paid his wages between March 1888 and January 1889, resulting in a court case at Canterbury County Court on 2 April 1889. Durtnall was employed by the Herne Bay Co. from May 1887 to 26 January 1889 and was paid a wage of 6s. per week to clean and stoke the engine, fit up bells and attend to the offices. Judgement was given in £9 for 30 weeks wages.

In October 1890 he was appointed Chief Electrical Engineer to the Cannon Street Hotel Co. He installed a high frequency electrical system at Cannon Street Hotel in 1895. He resigned in 1899.

By 1901 he had set up in business as an Electric Light and Power Engineer from premises at 85 Finsbury Pavement, E.C. Notable installations included: Messrs Hurst & Co. Dye Works; The Guildhall Literary and Art School, Winchester Corporation; Anderton's Hotel, Fleet Street, London; Messrs Raphael Tuck and Sons, Moorfields City, London; Messrs A. V. Smeeton and Co., Sun Court, Golden Lane, City (Arthur Valentine Smeeton, costume and blouse manufacturer, bankrupt 1908).

Some of his subsequent work was on buses and ships. He made an experimental petrol electric bus for London use c1905. However, was most of his work was with ships. Back in England, he continued work on 'hybrid' drives, namely coupling a high speed internal combustion engine to generators or alternators that produced electricity for variable speed electric traction motors that drove ship's propellors or wheels on automobiles and locomotives.

The "Paragon" thermo-electric engine was developed and patented by Durtnall in the early years of the 20th century. He proposed a number of applications, including road, rail, marine and air transport.

1906 Durtnall designed and constructed the first vehicle to be propelled by polyphase alternating current, generated on the vehicle itself. It took the form of a motor-omnibus that could travel at three different speeds.

1907 Petrol Electric Transmission Gear for Motor vehicles - by Hart-Durtnall E. W. Hart and William P. Durtnall.[2]

1908 Durtnall devised an electric transmission system for ships. On 18 July 1908 he read a paper on "The generation and electrical transmission of power for main marine propulsion and speed regulation" to the Institute of Marine Engineers at their meeting at the Congress Hall of the Franco-British Exhibition.

1909 Durtnall claimed that the use of the Paragon system in a Dreadnought would save 26% in the cost of fuel.

1911 Visitor at 217 St James Road, Bermondsey, London: William Peter Durtnall (age 38 born Herne Bay), Marine, Electrical, Automobile and Mechanical Consulting Engineer. Married and has children but not with him.[3]

1914 Durtnall read a paper entitled "The Evolution and Development of the Internal Combustion Railway Locomotive" to the Institution of Locomotive Engineers at Caxton Hall, Victoria, London on 17 June 1914.

WWI: he served in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, transferring to the RAF when formed. He was made temp. Lt. (R.N.V.R.), 7 August 1917 and Staff Officer; Lt., (R.N.V.R)., and given temporary command as Captain, 16 April 1918. He was appointed Captain on 1 February 1920. He always styled himself Captain RAF, but Captain is not an RAF rank. He was in the Air Ministry, which gave its staff Army ranks. His post was in the electrical section of the Civil Engineer's department.

Durtnall was active in engineering affairs from 1919, writing some articles, attending conferences, and making comments on proceedings until c1925, after which he appears to have written little.

1919 The Times reported that Durtnall, together with Commander G. T. Bowles R.N., had completed tests at Manchester on a new type of aeroplane engine that would be silent and from which the danger of fire in the air had been removed.

1923 in association with Hawthorn Leslie and Co, he built a petrol/steam hybrid locomotive using the Cristiani compressed steam system. He also designed a petrol engined electric transmission locomotive for service in Australia (unbuilt) and a battery electric locomotive. His thermo-electric locomotive, first proposed in 1902, was not built until 1920.

1947 Died in Luton

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. 1881 Census
  2. The Engineer 1907/01/25
  3. 1911 Census