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F. Danvers Power

Australian academic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

F. Danvers Power
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Frederick Danvers Power (1861–1955) was an Australian academic, a lecturer in geology and metallurgy.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

History

Power was born in England, a son of Samuel Browning Power (1824–1892), a shipowner of London, and his wife Rebecca Danvers (1835–1902).

He was educated at Malvern College, the Royal School of Mines, London, and the Mining Academy, Clausthal, Germany.[1]

In 1884 he migrated to Australia, settling in Melbourne. He worked in an assay laboratory in Bethanga until 1887,[2]

While an assayer for the Union Bank, he was in 1890 a key witness in the trial of Robert J. W. Pound, accused of the theft of some £5,000 worth of platinum from the Otway Ranges Company.[3]

He was appointed consulting engineer to tho Overflow Company in 1897.[4]

In 1902 he was appointed lecturer in mining at Sydney University, which he held until 1935.[5]

Power acted as manager of the Great Cobar mine in 1913 during the four months Bellinger was away on leave.[6]

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Memberships

Bibliography

  • The Pambula gold-deposits (1893)
  • A glossary of terms used in mining geology (1895)
  • Receptacles for valuable mineral deposits AIMM (1897)
  • Mine management Sydney University Press (1906)
  • Coalfields and Collieries of Australia (1912)
  • Pocketbook for Miners and Metallurgists (1914)

Other interests

  • He formed his own publishing company Rhincru Press and published various technical and non-fiction books
  • Power was a Scout Leader, and Assistant Commissioner; he wrote the Australian Boy Scouts Handbook
  • He was an excellent photographer and many of his glass plate Sydney street scenes are held in public collections.
  • He was an inveterate world traveller; many of the artefacts he picked up (especially from islands such as Nauru and Banaba, where phosphate rock was being mined) he donated to the Australian Museum.
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Family

Power married Muriel Faucett Blain (29 Aug 1876 – 22 Jan 1951) on 28 November 1901 among their children were:

  • Charles Danvers Power (10 March 1903 – 7 August 1995)
  • Robert Danvers "Bob" Power (21 April 1907 – 27 June 1997)

References

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