
Charles Algernon Parsons

Compound Steam Turbine, circa 1887
'Sir Charles Algernon Parsons', O.M. (
June 13,
1854 –
February 11,
1931) was a British
engineer, best known for his invention of the
steam turbine. He worked as an engineer on
dynamo and
turbine design, and
power generation, with great influence on the naval and
electrical engineering fields. He also developed optical equipment, for
searchlights and
telescopes.
Born at 13 Connaught Place, Hyde Park, London on June 13,1854, he was the youngest son of the famous Irish astronomer
Lord Rosse and photographic pioneer Mary Fields Rosse, and was educated at
Trinity College, Dublin and
St. John's College, Cambridge. After completing college, he joined the Newcastle-based engineering firm of
W.G. Armstrong as an apprentice, an unusual step for the son of a peer. He later moved to
Kitsons in Yorkshire where he worked on rocket powered
torpedoes.
In 1889, he founded
C.A. Parsons and Company in
Newcastle Upon Tyne to produce steam turbines to his design.
[1] He later founded the
Parsons Marine Steam Turbine Company, also in Newcastle, and became famous when in June 1897 his turbine powered
yacht, ''
Turbinia'', was sailed at speed through the Diamond Jubilee
Royal Navy fleet review off
Portsmouth, to demonstrate the great potential of the new technology. Today, ''Turbinia'' is housed in a purpose-built gallery at
the Discovery Museum, Newcastle.
He was
knighted in
1911, and made a member of the
Order of Merit in 1927.
He won the
Rumford Medal in
1902.
Birr Castle, in
County Offaly, houses a museum detailing the contribution the Parsons family have made to the fields of Science and Engineering. Part of the museum is given over to marine engineering work of Charles Parsons.
C.A. Parsons survives in the
Heaton area of Newcastle and is now part of
Siemens, a
German conglomerate. Sometimes referred to as Siemens Parsons, the company recently completed a major
redevelopment programme, reducing the size of its site by around three quarters and installing the latest
manufacturing technology.
The Parsons Building in Trinity College, Dublin, which houses the Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, is named in his honour.
[1] On 28 September 2006, the
Minister for Communications, Marine and Natural Resources, Mr
Noel Dempsey TD, announced the Charles Parsons Awards which provide funding for research groups engaged in
energy research in Ireland.
[2]
See also
★ Contemporaries of Parsons at St. John's College, Cambridge:
Kikuchi Dairoku;
Donald MacAlister
★
List of people on stamps of Ireland
★
Grubb Parsons
References
1. Chronology of Charles Parsons
Published Works Online
★
E-book: "The Steam Turbine and Other Inventions of Sir Charles Parsons"
★
Synthetic HPHT Diamond by Sir Charls Parsons
External links
★
Birr Castle, ancestral home
★
Profile of Charles Parsons
★
Profile at Cambridge University
★
Parsons and Turbinia
★
Sir Charles Parsons Symposium, excerpts from Transactions of the Newcomen Society