- TitleTechnical drawings prepared for use in construction of replica of Babbage's Difference Engine No.1
- ReferenceMSP/0019
- Production date-01-1957 - -09-1957
- R W Munro LtdBiographyBiographyR W Munro Ltd was established as an instrument manufacturer in 1864 by R W Munro. The firm quickly gained a considerable reputation in the fields of mathematical, optical, meteorological and banking equipment, fields in which it is still prominent. Following the Tay Bridge Disaster on 28th December 1879, where a bridge was blown away with a full passenger train, a public enquiry was set up. This enquiry found that there was a general lack of understanding of wind speed, how to measure it, and its impact on the bridge. As a result, W.H. Dines was called upon to research a solution to this problem. He devised the Dines Pressure Tube Anemometer. Following the design of this instrumentation, R.W. Munro was commissioned as the sole manufacturer of this product. These instruments were used around the world to better understand the impact of wind on the environment around us. In 1880, the Bank of England called upon R.W. Munro to supply a more efficient printing machine that would print and number notes at a rate of 3000 per hour. Over the next few years, the Post Office followed the Bank of England’s lead and began ordering printing machines from R.W. Munro In 1890 Mining Engineer & Geologist John Milne approached R.W. Munro to investigate the possibility of a collaborative effort to produce a sensitive portable seismograph. Over a 10 year period, John Milne and R.W. Munro worked to develop a set of equipment to measure earthquakes. This venture was a huge success. The Portable Seismograph was sold all over the world and could be found in places as far flung as Brazil, Australia and St Vincent in the Caribbean. R.W. Munro played a crucial role in the completion of Henry Babbage’s Analytical Engine Mill in 1906. Whilst Henry Babbage produced this machine simply to prove that it would have worked, this development represented a step towards the invention of the modern computer in later years. The efficacy of the machine was demonstrated when it was used to print pi (π) to 29 decimal places. Whilst the complete machine was never finished, it does work and is currently on display in London in the Science Museum’s computing section. In 1906, a Dines Pressure Tube Anemometer manufactured by R.W. Munro was lent for use on the expedition to the Antarctic led by Captain Scott. R.W. Munro Ltd. was incorporated in 1916, and the Munro family is still involved with the firm. The company now operates as Munro Instruments from Gilbert House, Woodford Green, Essex. R W Munro Ltd has traded at 103-149 Cornwall Rd., Tottenham & Bounds Green, Southgate (1965), all London, England.
- Extent17 sheets
- Physical descriptionInk on oiled linen paper.
- LanguageEnglish
- Level of descriptionTOP
- Repository nameScience Museum, London
- Babbage, CharlesBiographyBiography(1792-1871), mathematician Charles Babbage was born in 1791 in London. He began to show his talent for mathematics and invention from an early age. Following a private education, Babbage went to study at Cambridge in 1810. However, he disagreed with the theories of mathematics taught there and set about supplementing his lectures with European theories of mathematics instead. Babbage established the Analytical Society with a group of fellow mathematics undergraduates. They wrote and published a history of calculus and a translation of Sylvestre Francois Lacroix's book on differential and integral calculus. Whilst still at Cambridge, Babbage speculated about producing a machine to calculate logarithm tables for astronomy and navigation. He graduated in mathematics from Cambridge in 1814 and was made a fellow of the Royal Society in 1816. In 1819 Babbage began to design and construct a reliable mechanical calculator capable of producing and printing accurate tables. By 1822 he had built a small calculating machine, or 'Difference Engine', able to work out complicated equations. With the backing of the Royal Society, Babbage secured an initial government grant of £1,500 to build a larger machine. Work on the Difference Engine began in 1823, but was slower and more expensive than Babbage anticipated. Babbage's progress was further interrupted by personal tragedy when his wife and two of his children died in 1827. By 1834, the government had contributed £17,000 to build the machine. However, Babbage's disagreements with both his engineer, Joseph Clement, and the government meant work on the Difference Engine ceased altogether. In 1842 the government took the final decision to abandon the Difference Engine. By this time, Babbage was working on a more sophisticated engine, the 'Analytical Engine', which could perform multiple calculations, store numbers and be programmed using punched cards. Babbage's detailed drawings reveal the engine to be in many ways analogous to modern computers. He applied what he had learnt to design the 'Difference Engine No. 2', an improved version of his original engine. Babbage continued to work on the design of the Analytical Engine for the rest of his life, creating several different versions of the machine. He was convinced of its usefulness but lacked the funding to build it. The machine was never completed. Although Babbage is best known for his calculating engines, he was a lifelong inventor with a passion for improvement. His designs included an ophthalmoscope, an automaton for playing noughts and crosses, a ‘black box’ recorder for monitoring railway tracks and ‘speaking-tubes’ linking London and Liverpool amongst many other ideas. Babbage was also enthusiastic about promoting the usefulness of science in society. He helped set up the Astronomical Society (1820), the British Association for the Advancement of Science (1831) and the Statistical Society of London (1834). Between 1827 and 1835 he held the Lucasian Chair of Mathematics at Cambridge. He died in London in 1871, still working on the Analytical Engine. In 1991 the Science Museum constructed the Difference Engine No. 2 to commemorate the 200th anniversary of Babbage’s birth. The machine was based on Babbage’s original plans and demonstrated for the first time the viability of his designs.
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