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Australian inventor (1855–1912) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Sutton (4 September 1855, Ballarat, Victoria – 28 July 1912) was an Australian designer, engineer, and inventor credited with contributions to early developments in electricity, aviation, wireless communication, photography and telephony.[1]: 10 [2]
Henry Sutton | |
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Born | Ballarat, Victoria, Australia | 4 September 1855
Died | 28 July 1912 56) Malvern, Victoria, Australia | (aged
Occupation(s) | Inventor, music publisher |
Relatives | Hilda Rix Nicholas (niece) |
Family | |
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Photograph - Richard Henry Sutton 1830-1876, Collection, Gold Museum Ballarat. Retrieved on 5 December 2018. | |
Photograph - Black and White - Sutton Family, Historical Collection, Federation University Australia. Retrieved on 5 December 2018. |
Henry Sutton, the second of the eleven children of Richard Henry Sutton (1831 – 1876),[f 1] and Mary Sutton (1835 – 1894), née Johnson,[f 2] was born in a tent on the Ballarat goldfields on 4 September 1855.[1]: 3 He had three brothers, with whom he was associated in the Sutton Brothers musical business originally centred on Ballarat,[f 3] and two sisters. He married Elizabeth Ellen Wyatt (1860-1901) in 1881,[f 4] and Annie May Tatti (1884-), on 17 September 1902,[f 5] who bore four and two sons, respectively.[1]: 371
Up to the age of ten, Sutton was schooled by his mother, then attended a state school, and then Gracefield college between 1869 and 1872.[1]: 23 Sutton was self taught in the field of science, having read all the available books in library of the Ballarat Mechanics’ lnstitute by the age of 14.[3]
Sutton trained as a draftsman at the Ballarat School of Design[1]: 18 where he won a silver medal and 30 other prizes for drawing.[3]
Sutton studied at the Ballarat School of Mines.[3][4]
Sutton lectured at the Ballarat School of Mines from 1883 to 1886.[5] In 1883, as a consequence of his work on batteries, Sutton was admitted as an associate of the Society of Telegraph Engineers and of Electricians.[1]: 50, 57 M. Louis Adolphe Cochery minister of Post and Telegraph Office in France invited Sutton to membership of the Société Internationale des Electriciens.[1]: 50 [3] Sutton was also offered membership of Electrical societies from America, Belgium and Russia.[1]: 50 In 1890 prior to leaving for England, a farewell dinner was held by the citizens of Ballarat, where Sutton was presented with an Illuminated address.[1]: 84–8 [6]
Sutton registered Sutton's Process Syndicate in November 1891 at an address in London to exploit his Suttontype printing process. The process was not considered particularly innovative and it was reported to be unreliable. He abandoned the business to return to Australia.[7][8]
In 1892, he was introduced to Nikola Tesla by Lord Rayleigh and William Preece.[1]: ix
On the return voyage to Australia in 1893, Sutton used his printing process to contribute pictures to a shipboard newspaper called the Red Sea Scorcher.[9]
Sutton travelled with Alexander Graham Bell from Melbourne to Ballarat on 15 August 1910 where they discussed their respective discoveries.[1]: 225–6
Sutton died suddenly, at his residence ("Waltham", 9 Erskine Street, Malvern), on 28 July 1912, at the age of 56[10][11] and was buried in the Brighton Cemetery.[12]
Sutton's Suttontype process for converting photographs into a printing surface was patented in 1887.[p 1][13][14][15]
Sutton discovered, and patented, a galena "detector"[16]: 134 that had superior performance over other devices used to that time.[17][18][19][20][p 2]
Sutton had also built the world's first portable radio[1]: 222 and held a number of other patents relating to wireless transmission and reception.[p 3] [p 4] [p 5] [p 6]
Sutton built a clockwork-driven ornithopter operating on a fixed arm[1]: 11 and presented two papers on flight to the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain, in 1878, entitled "On the Flight of Birds and Aërial Navigation"[note 1][21] and "Second Paper on the Flight of Birds".[22]
In 1881, Sutton had developed a new rechargeable battery[23][24][1]: 18 [25][3]: 318 which was patented the following year.[1]: 49, 281 He also wrote of a four-volt cell compound battery invention which was described as impossible by the English Mechanic and World of Science in 1890.[8]: 170
Sutton demonstrated a light globe sixteen days after Edison's demonstration on 31 December 1879.[1]: 38 [3]: 316
Subsequently[when?] Sutton's vacuum pump design which overcame deficiencies in the Sprengel pump, was used for the production of light globes by the Edison Swan company.[1]: 42–4 [3]: 316–7 [26]
After reading of Bell's 1876 announcement of the invention of the telephone, Sutton had designed about twenty different telephones within a year.[27][3]: 316 Sutton was said[by whom?] to have "believed in the free flow of information as a gift to science ... patented little, although sixteen of his twenty original telephone designs were patented by others overseas".[28]
The first Australian telephone connection was made in Ballarat and Ballarat East, linking fire stations in the two towns. The exact location of one of the telephone sets can be seen in the Ballarat East Fire Station. The device once allowed communication between the two fire brigades in Ballarat so that they could more accurately locate fires from their watch towers.[29] Sutton had also wired up Sutton's Music Stores,[30] his family business warehouses and offices, with a telephone network two years before an official Australian telephone system.[31] Sutton devised a method for using gas and water pipes as part of a telephone circuit.[p 7][32]
In 1885 after cholera outbreak on a ship in Queensland, Sutton obtained a slide and managed to photograph the cholera germ at 1000 times magnification. A letter to this effect, from Sutton, was published in The Argus on 28 December 1885.[33]
In the 1880s Sutton also devised a colour photography process but, although examples of this work exist, he did not commercialize it.[1]: 98–9, 103
In 1885, Sutton designed, but did not construct, a mechanical television apparatus to see the Melbourne Cup in Ballarat.[34][3]: 319 Sutton had published his Telephane designs in 1890.[34][27][35] According to historian Ann Moyal, the concept was never successfully demonstrated: "Sutton's 'TV system', which he called 'telephany', used all the latest technology, such as the recently-invented Kerr effect, the Nipkow disc (which Baird was to use in the 'twenties) and the selenium photocell. But its weak link in the 1870s was that the signal had to be transferred by telegraph lines, as radio had yet to arrive, and these were too slow to transmit the dashing horses of the Melbourne Cup successfully."[36]
Sutton used his telephane system to demonstrate facsimile transmission with the help of Nicola Tesla in England.[1]: 188–9 An account of his invention was later published in Washington in 1896, noting that the first patents for long-distance transmission of images dated back to 1867.[37]
For the benefit of his mother, who had been paralyzed by a stroke, a new hydraulic lift had been installed in the newly built Suttons Music Emporium.[1]: 109 As Ballarat's low water pressure and lack of an efficient drainage system were incompatible, Sutton designed and built a new hydraulic mechanism to drive the lift.[30] This design was subsequently used by the Austral Otis company and exported for use in America.[1]: 110
Second Sutton Autocar | |
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Photograph: Second Sutton Autocar, Collection of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Victorian Section. Retrieved on 5 December 2018. |
From 1898 Sutton held patents for improvements in combustion engine carburettors;[p 8][p 9][p 10][p 11][p 12][p 13] and, by 1899, he had built and driven the Sutton Autocar, one of the first motor cars in Australia.[5]
Sutton was a founding member of the Automobile Club of Victoria;[2] and, at its inaugural meeting, on 10 December 1903, Sutton's proposed "objects of the club" were unanimously accepted by all present:
On 20 January 2004, several streets in the new Canberra suburb of Dunlop were named after "inventors, inventions, and artists"; and one of these new streets was called "Henry Sutton Circuit".[44]
In 2014, the Telecommunications Association (formerly known as the Telecommunications Society of Australia, which had its origins in the Telegraph Electrical Society, founded in Melbourne in 1874), inaugurated its annual Henry Sutton Oration.[45]
Les Murray referred to Sutton and television in his 1990 poem "The Tube".[46]
Science journalist Robyn Williams has featured Sutton in episodes of his long-running radio program.[47]
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