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{{Short description|French physicist (1868–1917)}}
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{{refimprove|date=November 2009}}
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{{Infobox person
| name = Camille Papin Tissot
| image = CAMILLE TISSOT.JPG
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1868|10|15|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Brest, France|Brest]], France
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1917|10|02|1868|10|15|df=y}}
| death_place = [[Arcachon]], France
}}
}}


''' Camille Papin Tissot''' ({{IPA|fr|kamij tiso}}; 15 October 1868 – 2 October 1917) was a French naval officer and pioneer of [[wireless telegraphy]] who established the first French operational radio connections at sea.
[[File:CAMILLE TISSOT.JPG|thumb|150px|Camille Papin Tissot]]

''' Camille Papin Tissot''' (15 October 1868 in [[Brest, France]] – 2 October 1917 in [[Arcachon]]), was a French naval officer and pioneer of [[wireless telegraphy]] who established the first French operational radio connections at sea.


== Life ==
== Life ==
Camille Papin Tissot was the second child of Pierre Tissot and Adeline Alexandrine Gérardin, born on 15 October 1868. Their third child, Esther Adèle Tissot, was born on 1 April 1872. The two surviving children, Camille and Esther, were primarily raised by their mother, as their father was often at sea.
Camille Papin Tissot was the second child of Pierre Tissot and Adeline Alexandrine Gérardin, born on 15 October 1868. Their third child, Esther Adèle Tissot, was born on 1 April 1872. The two surviving children, Camille and Esther, were primarily raised by their mother, as their father was often at sea.


Recommended by his father, Camille Tissot entered the naval college at Brest in 1884 when he was 16 years old. He studied navigation on the school ship [[French ship Borda|Le Borda]] until 1886, and was then posted to the port of Brest. In the first years of his career in the navy, he was successively posted to various school ships and warships, finally to the cruiser "Coetlogon". He then turned to shore duty as of 23 January 1891. He agreed to temporarily occupy one of the teaching positions in [[physics]] and [[chemistry]] of the naval school. He stayed on for 21 years as a professor in [[École Navale]].<ref name="Tissot">{{cite web |url=http://ecole.nav.traditions.free.fr/officiers_tissot.htm |title=Officiers et anciens élèves |language=fr |access-date=22 December 2018}}</ref> The passion of sciences having been transmitted to him by his father, he obtained the degree of Bachelor of the Physical sciences. It was as a professor in [[École Navale]] that he became devoted to the study of the electric oscillations and their application in the maritime field.
Recommended by his father, Camille Tissot entered the naval college at Brest in 1884 when he was 16 years old.
He studied navigation on the school ship [[French ship Borda|Le Borda]] until 1886, and was then posted to the port of Brest. In the first years of his career in the navy, he was successively posted to various school ships and warships, finally to the cruiser "Coetlogon". He then turned to shore duty as of 23 January 1891. He agreed to temporarily occupy one of the teaching positions in [[physics]] and [[chemistry]] of the naval school. He stayed on for 21 years as professor in [[École Navale]].<ref>[http://ecole.nav.traditions.free.fr/officiers_tissot.htm Officiers et anciens élèves]</ref> The passion of sciences having been transmitted to him by his father, he obtained the degree of Bachelor of the Physical sciences. It was as professor in [[École Navale]] that he became devoted to the study of the electric oscillations and their application in the maritime field.


Tissot acquired ranks during his various assignments:
Tissot acquired ranks during his various assignments:<ref name="Tissot" />


* 1 August 1886: [[Aspirant]] of second class,
* 1 August 1886: [[Aspirant]] of second class<!-- the named ref doesn't cover this one -->
* 5 October 1887: [[Aspirant]] of first class,
* 5 October 1887: [[Aspirant]] of first class
* 5 October 1889: [[Enseigne de vaisseau]],
* 5 October 1889: [[Enseigne de vaisseau]]
* 22 August 1896: [[Lieutenant de vaisseau]],
* 22 August 1896: [[Lieutenant de vaisseau]]
* 19 April 1912: [[Capitaine de frégate]],
* 19 April 1912: [[Capitaine de frégate]]
This last promotion was exceptional for a sailor who practically never sailed, and it was due to the importance of the work undertaken by Tissot for the Navy.


This last promotion was exceptional for a sailor who practically never sailed. It was due to the importance of the work undertaken by Tissot for the Navy.
In 1894 Camille Tissot met and married Jeanne Emma Stapfer, a 20-year-old woman of an Alsacienne family who moved to Brest in 1870. He nominally converted to the Catholic religion at the request of his father-in-law, although his own beliefs were socialist and atheist. Among the guests at his wedding were Albert Turpain and [[Marcel Cachin]], very committed member of Parliament and future founder of [[French Communist Party]] in 1920. They had one daughter (Camille).

In 1894, Camille Tissot met and married Jeanne Emma Stapfer, a 20-year-old woman of an Alsacienne family who moved to Brest in 1870. He nominally converted to the Catholic religion at the request of his father-in-law, although his own beliefs were socialist and atheist. Among the guests at his wedding were Albert Turpain and [[Marcel Cachin]], very committed members of Parliament and future founder of [[French Communist Party]] in 1920. They had one daughter, Camille.


== Work ==
== Work ==


[[File:Recepteur tube limaille.JPG|thumb|200px|In 1902 Tissot used a coherer receiver of this type at the lighhouse at [[Ushant]], communicating over a range of 80 kilometers.]]
[[File:Recepteur tube limaille.JPG|thumb|200px|In 1902 Tissot used a coherer receiver of this type at the lighthouse at [[Ushant]], communicating over a range of 80 kilometers.]]


[[File:SIE n°57 tiré à part TISSOT (dédicace à Maurice JEANCE).JPG|thumb|upright=1.8|Article by Camille Tissot, published in the n° 57 of July 1906 of the bulletin of the "Company of the Electricians" (''Société des électriciens'').]]
[[File:SIE n°57 tiré à part TISSOT (dédicace à Maurice JEANCE).JPG|thumb|upright=1.8|Article by Camille Tissot, published in the n° 57 of July 1906 of the bulletin of the "Company of the Electricians" (''Société des électriciens'').]]
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In 1898 he also established radio contact to the island of [[Ouessant]]. This station will become [[Ushant]] radio station, with call sign FFU ( French Fixe of Ushant), which is active there until 1943.
In 1898 he also established radio contact to the island of [[Ouessant]]. This station will become [[Ushant]] radio station, with call sign FFU ( French Fixe of Ushant), which is active there until 1943.


In 1899, Tissot published a report describing his work and experiments through the roads of Brest. In 1900, Tissot equipped the French Navy with its first radio apparatus.<ref>Donald Monroe McNicol , '' Radio's conquest of space: the experimental rise in radio communication'' Taylor & Francis, 1946 pages 46 and 113</ref>
In 1899, Tissot published a report describing his work and experiments through the roads of Brest. In 1900, Tissot equipped the French Navy with its first radio apparatus.<ref>{{cite book |first=Donald Monroe |last=McNicol |title=Radio's conquest of space: the experimental rise in radio communication |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=1946 |pages=46, 113}}</ref>


In 1902, the station Ushant TSF is established with a radio operator, receiver with coherer, and an arc transmitter. This station had a [[radio telegraphy]] range of 80 kilometers with a fleet of 14 ships at sea and with Brest.
In 1902, the station Ushant TSF is established with a radio operator, receiver with coherer, and an arc transmitter. This station had a [[radio telegraphy]] range of 80 kilometers with a fleet of 14 ships at sea and with Brest.
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During the First World War, Tissot made several stays at [[Bizerte]], to equip ships with radio and to work on detection of underwater sound.
During the First World War, Tissot made several stays at [[Bizerte]], to equip ships with radio and to work on detection of underwater sound.


Commander Tissot died in October 1917, of disease. He was buried at the cemetery of Arcachon. He was an [[Officer of the Legion of Honor]], and Officer of the State education.
Commander Tissot died in October 1917 of pulmonary tuberculosis and influenza.<ref name="Tissot" /> He was buried in the military square of the cemetery of Arcachon.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.shaapb.fr/150-ans-dhistoire-au-cimetiere-darcachon/ |title=150 ans d'histoire au cimetière d'Arcachon |trans-title=150 years of history at the cemetery of Arcachon |language=fr |date=3 July 2014 |access-date=22 December 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://mouillagescdrom.wifeo.com/journees-patrimoine-20-21-septembre-2014-bassin-d-arcachon.php |title=Commandant Camille Tissot précurseur de la TSF et de la VHF marine |access-date=22 December 2018}}</ref> He was an [[Officer of the Legion of Honor]], and Officer of the State education.


== Publications ==
== Publications ==
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He wrote three detailed works:
He wrote three detailed works:
* {{fr icon}} Mémoire de thèse de Doctorat sur la résonance des antennes (1905). Memory of thesis of Doctorate on the resonance of the antennas.
* {{fr icon}} Traité sur les oscillations électriques (1906) Treaty on the electric oscillations.
* {{fr icon}} Manuel de TSF théorique et pratique (1912), Handbook of theoretical and practical TSF (1912), republished until 1932 (6th edition).
* {{fr icon}} [http://www.camille-tissot.fr/index3.php?rubrique=mapage30 books written by Camille Tissot.]


* {{in lang|fr}} Mémoire de thèse de Doctorat sur la résonance des antennes (1905). Doctoral thesis on antenna resonance
He was also the author of many articles of popularization of radio in international scientific reviews, and gave very many conferences on the subject. Although not a member, he intervened regularly in front of the Academy of the sciences.<ref>' ' On the use of sensitive detectors of electric oscillations based on the phenomena thermo-électriques' ', presented in front of the Academy of Science the 6juillet 1908</ref> He received several prizes and rewards of the Academy.
* {{in lang|fr}} Traité sur les oscillations électriques (1906) Treatise on electric oscillations
* {{in lang|fr}} Manuel de TSF théorique et pratique (1912), Handbook of theoretical and practical TSF (1912), republished until 1932 (6th edition).
* {{in lang|fr}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20081111060423/http://www.camille-tissot.fr/index3.php?rubrique=mapage30 books written by Camille Tissot.]

He was also the author of many articles of popularization of radio in international scientific reviews, and gave very many conferences on the subject. Although not a member, he intervened regularly in front of the Académie des Sciences.<ref>{{cite journal |journal=Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences |volume=147 |page=[https://archive.org/details/ComptesRendusAcademieDesSciences0147/page/n36 37] |title=Sur l'emploi de détecteurs sensibles d'oscillations électriques basés sur les phénomènes thermo-électriques |trans-title=On the use of sensitive detectors of electric oscillations based on the phenomena thermo-électriques |date=6 July 1908 |url=https://archive.org/details/ComptesRendusAcademieDesSciences0147 |language=fr |access-date=22 December 2018}}</ref> He received several prizes and rewards of the Academy.


== See also ==
== See also ==
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* [[Cat's whisker detector]]
* [[Cat's whisker detector]]
* [[Electrolytic detector]]
* [[Electrolytic detector]]
* [[Foster-Seeley discriminator]]
* [[Foster–Seeley discriminator]]
* [[Grid-leak detector]]
* [[Grid-leak detector]]
* [[Hot wire barretter]]
* [[Hot wire barretter]]
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== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{fr icon}} [http://www.camille-tissot.fr/index3.php?rubrique=mapage30 Books written by Camille Tissot.]
* {{in lang|fr}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20081111060423/http://www.camille-tissot.fr/index3.php?rubrique=mapage30 Books written by Camille Tissot.]
* {{fr icon}} [http://www.camille-tissot.fr/ Files concerning Camille Papin Tissot]
* {{in lang|fr}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20170320132504/http://www.camille-tissot.fr/ Files concerning Camille Papin Tissot]
* {{fr icon}} [http://www.wiki-brest.net/index.php/Camille_Tissot Camille Tissot on Wiki Brest]
* {{in lang|fr}} [http://www.wiki-brest.net/index.php/Camille_Tissot Camille Tissot on Wiki Brest]
* {{fr icon}} [http://www.radiomaritime.com/index.php?rubrique=mapage3243 Radio Ouessant ]
* {{in lang|fr}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20110309054800/http://www.radiomaritime.com/index.php?rubrique=mapage3243 Radio Ouessant ]


== Further reading ==
== Further reading ==


* ''Commandant Camille Tissot '', ''Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers '' Feb. 1918, Vol. 6, Issue 1, Pg. 4 {{ISSN|0731-5996}}, {{doi|10.1109/JRPROC.1918.217352}}
* {{cite journal |title=Commandant Camille Tissot [Obituary] |journal=Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers |date=Feb 1918 |volume=6 |issue=1 |page=4 |issn=0731-5996 |doi=10.1109/JRPROC.1918.217352 |last1=Baker |first1=L. }}


{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2010}}
{{Telecommunications}}
{{Telecommunications}}


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[[Category:1868 births]]
[[Category:1868 births]]
[[Category:1917 deaths]]
[[Category:1917 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Brest, France]]
[[Category:French Navy officers from Brest, France]]
[[Category:French physicists]]
[[Category:19th-century French physicists]]
[[Category:École Navale alumni]]
[[Category:École Navale alumni]]
[[Category:Members of the French Academy of Sciences]]
[[Category:Members of the French Academy of Sciences]]
[[Category:French telecommunications engineers]]
[[Category:French telecommunications engineers]]
[[Category:Experimental physicists]]
[[Category:Experimental physicists]]
[[Category:Officiers of the Légion d'honneur]]
[[Category:Officers of the Legion of Honour]]
[[Category:IEEE Medal of Honor recipients]]
[[Category:19th-century French engineers]]
[[Category:French engineers]]
[[Category:19th-century French inventors]]
[[Category:French inventors]]
[[Category:Radio pioneers]]
[[Category:Radio pioneers]]
[[Category:European amateur radio operators]]
[[Category:European amateur radio operators]]
[[Category:20th-century French inventors]]
[[Category:20th-century deaths from tuberculosis]]
[[Category:Tuberculosis deaths in France]]
[[Category:Deaths from influenza]]

Latest revision as of 09:27, 19 December 2024

Camille Papin Tissot
Born(1868-10-15)15 October 1868
Brest, France
Died2 October 1917(1917-10-02) (aged 48)
Arcachon, France

Camille Papin Tissot (French pronunciation: [kamij tiso]; 15 October 1868 – 2 October 1917) was a French naval officer and pioneer of wireless telegraphy who established the first French operational radio connections at sea.

Life

[edit]

Camille Papin Tissot was the second child of Pierre Tissot and Adeline Alexandrine Gérardin, born on 15 October 1868. Their third child, Esther Adèle Tissot, was born on 1 April 1872. The two surviving children, Camille and Esther, were primarily raised by their mother, as their father was often at sea.

Recommended by his father, Camille Tissot entered the naval college at Brest in 1884 when he was 16 years old. He studied navigation on the school ship Le Borda until 1886, and was then posted to the port of Brest. In the first years of his career in the navy, he was successively posted to various school ships and warships, finally to the cruiser "Coetlogon". He then turned to shore duty as of 23 January 1891. He agreed to temporarily occupy one of the teaching positions in physics and chemistry of the naval school. He stayed on for 21 years as a professor in École Navale.[1] The passion of sciences having been transmitted to him by his father, he obtained the degree of Bachelor of the Physical sciences. It was as a professor in École Navale that he became devoted to the study of the electric oscillations and their application in the maritime field.

Tissot acquired ranks during his various assignments:[1]

This last promotion was exceptional for a sailor who practically never sailed. It was due to the importance of the work undertaken by Tissot for the Navy.

In 1894, Camille Tissot met and married Jeanne Emma Stapfer, a 20-year-old woman of an Alsacienne family who moved to Brest in 1870. He nominally converted to the Catholic religion at the request of his father-in-law, although his own beliefs were socialist and atheist. Among the guests at his wedding were Albert Turpain and Marcel Cachin, very committed members of Parliament and future founder of French Communist Party in 1920. They had one daughter, Camille.

Work

[edit]
In 1902 Tissot used a coherer receiver of this type at the lighthouse at Ushant, communicating over a range of 80 kilometers.
Article by Camille Tissot, published in the n° 57 of July 1906 of the bulletin of the "Company of the Electricians" (Société des électriciens).

In 1896, when the work of Lodge and of Marconi concerning wireless telegraphy was still little known, Tissot undertook parallel and independent research. He built apparatus for radio experiments with the assistance of E. Branly and of the manufacturer Eugene Ducretet for whom later he will develop apparatus.

On 3 August 1898, Tissot demonstrates the first French operational radio connection at sea, covering 800 meters between "BORDERED" and an on-shore semaphore station. Convinced, the Minister of Marine on 6 August agrees to finance purchase of material to allow him to continue his tests. With this apparatus Camille Tissot in 1899 organized a large trial run and demonstrates communications by radio, initially between various points of the roads of Brest and the Saint Martin church, then to the islands Vierge (Plouguerneau) and Stiff (Ushant).

In 1898 he also established radio contact to the island of Ouessant. This station will become Ushant radio station, with call sign FFU ( French Fixe of Ushant), which is active there until 1943.

In 1899, Tissot published a report describing his work and experiments through the roads of Brest. In 1900, Tissot equipped the French Navy with its first radio apparatus.[2]

In 1902, the station Ushant TSF is established with a radio operator, receiver with coherer, and an arc transmitter. This station had a radio telegraphy range of 80 kilometers with a fleet of 14 ships at sea and with Brest.

In 1904 the Ouessant radio station with call sign FFU carried out radiotelegraphic connections on 600 meters with a fleet of passenger ships.

From 1905, Tissot made very thorough studies on the detection of radio signals. Following these tests, Tissot showed the possibility of using radio to transmit a time signal and to regulate the chronometers of the ships at sea. The Bureau des Longitudes started daily time signal service starting in May 1910.

In 1907, Tissot conceived, with F Pellin, a Crystal radio without tiresome adjustment to receive signals aboard ships.

In 1911, his technical expertise was required by a committee of French industrialists carried out by E Girardeau, during the series of lawsuits between the Marconi Company and French radio companies. With the occasion of these lawsuits, Tissot and Férrié in particular sought to show certain faults of patent 77777 of Marconi, but also the priority of experiments of certain French scientists, like Eugene Ducretet. Marconi won the lawsuit, but the decision of the court, which gave the Marconi the right to replace the French material by material made by Marconi, will never be applied in France.

During the First World War, Tissot made several stays at Bizerte, to equip ships with radio and to work on detection of underwater sound.

Commander Tissot died in October 1917 of pulmonary tuberculosis and influenza.[1] He was buried in the military square of the cemetery of Arcachon.[3][4] He was an Officer of the Legion of Honor, and Officer of the State education.

Publications

[edit]
Résonance of the antenna

He wrote three detailed works:

  • (in French) Mémoire de thèse de Doctorat sur la résonance des antennes (1905). Doctoral thesis on antenna resonance
  • (in French) Traité sur les oscillations électriques (1906) Treatise on electric oscillations
  • (in French) Manuel de TSF théorique et pratique (1912), Handbook of theoretical and practical TSF (1912), republished until 1932 (6th edition).
  • (in French) books written by Camille Tissot.

He was also the author of many articles of popularization of radio in international scientific reviews, and gave very many conferences on the subject. Although not a member, he intervened regularly in front of the Académie des Sciences.[5] He received several prizes and rewards of the Academy.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Officiers et anciens élèves" (in French). Retrieved 22 December 2018.
  2. ^ McNicol, Donald Monroe (1946). Radio's conquest of space: the experimental rise in radio communication. Taylor & Francis. pp. 46, 113.
  3. ^ "150 ans d'histoire au cimetière d'Arcachon" [150 years of history at the cemetery of Arcachon] (in French). 3 July 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2018.
  4. ^ "Commandant Camille Tissot précurseur de la TSF et de la VHF marine". Retrieved 22 December 2018.
  5. ^ "Sur l'emploi de détecteurs sensibles d'oscillations électriques basés sur les phénomènes thermo-électriques" [On the use of sensitive detectors of electric oscillations based on the phenomena thermo-électriques]. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences (in French). 147: 37. 6 July 1908. Retrieved 22 December 2018.
[edit]

Further reading

[edit]