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 162,260 pages of information and 244,501 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.

Difference between revisions of "Tolmie John Tresidder"

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Captain Tolmie John Tresidder (c1851-1931), director of [[John Brown and Co]] and a director of [[Anglo-French Nickel Co]]
Captain Tolmie John Tresidder (c1851-1931), director of [[John Brown and Co]] and a director of [[Anglo-French Nickel Co]]
----
''' 1931 Obituary <ref>[[The Engineer 1931/03/27]]</ref>
IT is with great regret that we have to record the
death of Captain Tolmie John Tresidder, C.M.G.,
late R.E., who for many years was a director of John
Brown and Co., Ltd., and an authority on armour
and projectiles.
Captain Tresidder died at his home
in Upper Norwood on Friday last, March 20th, at the
age of eighty-one. He was the elder son of the late
Surgeon-General Tresidder, of H.M. Indian Medical
Department, and was born at Chunar, India.
After completing his education at Dulwich and the Royal
Military Academy, Woolwich, he joined the Royal
Engineers, becoming Lieutenant in 1870 and Captain
in 1882. He spent over ten years in Malta, where he
carried out the drainage scheme of the five fortified
cities, and was twice thanked by the Commander-in-Chief for his services. He retired from the Army in 1887.
His mathematical attainment, and aptitude
for ballistics found use in his work with John Brown
and Co., Ltd., where he devoted himself chiefly to the
development of armour and armour-piercing projectiles.
In 1871, jointly with the late [[J. D. Ellis|Mr. J. D. Ellis]], he invented the system of chilled compound plates, combining the cementation and chilling processes
in a manner which increased greatly the shot-resisting
power of armour. This process was continued
until 1896, when the firm's armour plants
were adapted for the Krupp process.
Before he retired from active management in 1902,
Captain Tresidder designed and supervised the installation
of a complete new armour-making plant at the
Atlas Steel Works of John Brown and Co., Ltd., Sheffield.
He continued to hold the office of a director
of the company, to which he was appointed in 1894,
until last year. He was also a director of the Anglo-French
Nickel Company, Ltd., of Swansea.
In 1907 he read a. paper on "Modern Armour and its Attack
before the [[Institution of Naval Architects]], and he was
awarded the Institution's Gold Medal the following
year. He also received the Bessemer Gold Medal
for original research.
Captain Tresidder was the author of many published
works on armour and projectiles and the laws of high speed
punching. Towards the end of the war he
invented a special device for de-capping shells. It took
the form of protective steel mats, and was fitted to a
large number of battleships and cruisers. He was
also the inventor of a slide rule for calculating the
striking velocity of shell against armour, which
found extended use. Even during the last two
years his inventive faculty was not idle, and be
patented two new types of micrometers for the
internal and external fine gauging of parts.
----


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Revision as of 17:03, 10 October 2014

Captain Tolmie John Tresidder (c1851-1931), director of John Brown and Co and a director of Anglo-French Nickel Co


1931 Obituary [1]

IT is with great regret that we have to record the death of Captain Tolmie John Tresidder, C.M.G., late R.E., who for many years was a director of John Brown and Co., Ltd., and an authority on armour and projectiles.

Captain Tresidder died at his home in Upper Norwood on Friday last, March 20th, at the age of eighty-one. He was the elder son of the late Surgeon-General Tresidder, of H.M. Indian Medical Department, and was born at Chunar, India.

After completing his education at Dulwich and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, he joined the Royal Engineers, becoming Lieutenant in 1870 and Captain in 1882. He spent over ten years in Malta, where he carried out the drainage scheme of the five fortified cities, and was twice thanked by the Commander-in-Chief for his services. He retired from the Army in 1887.

His mathematical attainment, and aptitude for ballistics found use in his work with John Brown and Co., Ltd., where he devoted himself chiefly to the development of armour and armour-piercing projectiles.

In 1871, jointly with the late Mr. J. D. Ellis, he invented the system of chilled compound plates, combining the cementation and chilling processes in a manner which increased greatly the shot-resisting power of armour. This process was continued until 1896, when the firm's armour plants were adapted for the Krupp process.

Before he retired from active management in 1902, Captain Tresidder designed and supervised the installation of a complete new armour-making plant at the Atlas Steel Works of John Brown and Co., Ltd., Sheffield.

He continued to hold the office of a director of the company, to which he was appointed in 1894, until last year. He was also a director of the Anglo-French Nickel Company, Ltd., of Swansea.

In 1907 he read a. paper on "Modern Armour and its Attack before the Institution of Naval Architects, and he was awarded the Institution's Gold Medal the following year. He also received the Bessemer Gold Medal for original research.

Captain Tresidder was the author of many published works on armour and projectiles and the laws of high speed punching. Towards the end of the war he invented a special device for de-capping shells. It took the form of protective steel mats, and was fitted to a large number of battleships and cruisers. He was also the inventor of a slide rule for calculating the striking velocity of shell against armour, which found extended use. Even during the last two years his inventive faculty was not idle, and be patented two new types of micrometers for the internal and external fine gauging of parts.


See Also

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