- Title - Albums documenting the laying of submarine cables (Sierra Leone-Ascension, Durban-Mauritius) 
- Reference - MS/0464 
- Production date - 1901 - 1902 
Creator
- Lucas, Francis RobertBiographyBiography(1849-1931), telegraph engineer
Francis Robert Lucas, born in in 1849, was a telegraph engineer, working from 1856 at the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Co. (Telcon) at Enderby’s Wharf in Greenwich. He was involved in laying submarine cable, succeeding Henry Clifford as Chief Engineer in 1893, and becoming Managing Director in 1906 until his retirement in 1925. He participated in the cable laying voyages of SS 'Great Eastern' in 1878; invented a wire-sounding machine which was first used on the cable laying ship the 'Alert' in 1887; invented a type of oceanographic sounding machine in 1891; patented a scoop sounder, an instrument also known as the 'snapper' which was used when cable laying.  
He was married to Katherine and they were the parents of Ralph Lucas (1876-1955), designer and builder of motor cars. Francis died in 1931. 
- Extent - 3 volumes 
- Language - English 
- Level of description - TOP 
- Repository name - Science Museum, London 
- Conditions governing access - Open Access 
- Conditions governing Reproduction - Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions 
Related object
- System of arrangement - MS/0461-MS/0464 are all part of 1984-1432