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[[File:Horace See - Cassier's 1892-07.png|thumb|Horace See was portrayed in the July 1892 edition of [[Cassier's Magazine]].]]
[[File:Horace See - Cassier's 1892-07.png|thumb|Horace See was portrayed in the July 1892 edition of [[Cassier's Magazine]].]]
'''Horace See''' ([[Philadelphia]], July 16, 1835 - [[New York City]], December 14, 1909) was an American [[mechanical engineer]], [[marine engineer]], [[naval architect]], inventor, and superintendent. He is known as principal naval architect at the [[William Cramp & Sons]] shipyard in Philadelphia,<ref>William duBarry Thomas. ''Speed on the ship!: a centennial history of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, 1893-1993.'' 1993, p. 11.</ref> and as president of the [[American Society of Mechanical Engineers]] in the year 1888-89.<ref name ="ASME 1910"> American Society of Mechanical Engineers, "[https://archive.org/stream/journalofamerica32amer#page/n309/mode/2up Horace See, President of the Society in 1888, died in New York City on December 14, 1909]." in: ''Journal of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.'' Jan-Apr 1910. p. 23 (p. 309)</ref>
'''Horace See''' ([[Philadelphia]], July 16, 1835 - [[New York City]], December 14, 1909) was an American [[mechanical engineer]], [[marine engineer]], [[naval architect]], inventor, and superintendent. He is known as principal naval architect at the [[William Cramp & Sons]] shipyard in Philadelphia,<ref>William duBarry Thomas. ''Speed on the ship!: a centennial history of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, 1893-1993.'' 1993, p. 11.</ref> and as president of the [[American Society of Mechanical Engineers]] in the year 1888-89.<ref name ="ASME 1910"> American Society of Mechanical Engineers, "[https://archive.org/stream/journalofamerica32amer#page/n309/mode/2up Horace See, President of the Society in 1888, died in New York City on December 14, 1909]." in: ''Journal of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.'' Jan-Apr 1910. p. 23 (p. 309)</ref><ref>Philip Scranton. ''Endless Novelty: Specialty Production and American Industrialization, 1865-1925.'' 2000. p. 104</ref>

See is also known for his contribution to "bringing triple and quadruple expansion engines to the [[United States]] and for making significant improvements in their operation."<ref>Greg H. Williams (2014), ''The Liberty Ships of World War II: A Record of the 2,710 Vessels and Their Builders, Operators and Namesakes, with a History of the Jeremiah O'Brien.'' p. 92</ref>


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
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== Publications ==
== Publications ==
* Horace See, ''Some Sea Specialties.'' New York. 1906.
* Horace See, ''Some Sea Specialties.'' New York. 1899, 1906.


; Articles, a selection
; Articles, a selection

Revision as of 17:41, 7 May 2017

Horace See was portrayed in the July 1892 edition of Cassier's Magazine.

Horace See (Philadelphia, July 16, 1835 - New York City, December 14, 1909) was an American mechanical engineer, marine engineer, naval architect, inventor, and superintendent. He is known as principal naval architect at the William Cramp & Sons shipyard in Philadelphia,[1] and as president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in the year 1888-89.[2][3]

See is also known for his contribution to "bringing triple and quadruple expansion engines to the United States and for making significant improvements in their operation."[4]

Biography

See was born in Philadelphia in 1835, son of the well-known silk importer R. Calhoun See. He received classical and mathematical education at the Episcopal Academy and the private school of H. D. Gregory. He started his career as apprentice in the Port Richmond Iron Foundry, Machine and Steam Boiler Shop, I.P. Morris & Co. After a few years he moved on from Neafie & Levy to the National Iron Armor and Shipbuilding Company.[2]

Later See became superintendent of George Snyder Machine Works in Philadelphia, and after his service in the Civil War, he started at William Cramp and Sons Ship and Engine Building Company in Philadelphia as designer and became superintendent of engineering in 1879.[5]

After Camp and Sons, in 1889, See moved to New York, where he worked as consulting engineer for the Newport News Steamship and Dry Dock Company. He was superintending engineer for the Southern Pacific Company, and the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, superintendent for the Cromwell Steam Ship Company. In his private practice as a marine engineer and naval architect he designed and prepared specifications for many yachts and commercial vessels.[2]

See was a member of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers; of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects of Great Britain; the Northeast Coast Institute of Engineers and Shipbuilders; and the American Geographical Society; associate member of the American Society of Naval Engineers; and the United States Naval Institute; and fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[2] He was also member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and its president in the year 1888-89.[6]

Work

William Cramp and Sons Ship and Engine Building Company

1890s advertisement for William Cramp & Sons, Philadelphia, PA.

See made his most significant contributions working at William Cramp and Sons Ship and Engine Building Company in Philadelphia from the late 1870s to the late 1880s. See has designed and managed the building of some fifty or more large marine engines of, in some cases, as high as 4000 horse power, among which were those of the USS Alameda, one of the first vessels fitted, with triple expansion engines in the United States.[7]

The ASME (1910) summarized that he was

"...designing vessels and machinery of greatly improved construction and performance, introducing improved methods of work and standards in that great establishment, and giving to the United States a shipbuilding plant of capacity and quality to compare favorably with the products of the Clyde and Newcastle."[2]

At Camp and Sons, according to the ASME (1910), it was "under his leadership that the United States Navy contracts for the first vessels of what was then called the New Navy of the United States were taken, and the big ships of the American Line at that day bore his impress"[2]

Hydro-pneumatic ash ejectors

Horace See invented a Hydro-pneumatic ash ejectors, which found their way in many ship designs in his days. For this invention See was awarded in 1904 a John Scott Medal in the field of engineering on behalf of the City of Philadelphia .[8]

In 1906 Horace See published his own trade catalog, Some Sea Specialties. with pictures of yachts, merchant vessels, liners and warships for which his firm provided his hydro-pneumatic ash ejectors.

Cross Ocean at 30 Knots per Hour

In the 1907 article "To Cross Ocean at 30 Knots per Hour," in the The New York Times, republished in the Hawaiian Star, Horace See commented on the design of the first trans-atlantic steamer to do 30 knots per hour.[9]

According to See the constructing of a 30-knot turbine steamship for transatlantic trade was entirely feasible. Turbine engine would come to stay, and would solve many marine problems. He and a colleague had declared, according to the article, that "there is no question but that the turbine engine will ultimately displace the reciprocating one on shipboard, as it Is now doing on land, but up to, the present time it has failed to do ee or shewn any. Superiority outside of reduced vibration, as there yet remains unsolved the exact combination of turbine, hull, and screw propeller to give results superior to those obtained from the reciprocating engine in vessels..."[9]

Turbinia at speed in 1897.

One of the chief engineers at the Cramps yard declared, that "it was not until 1894, that the idea of propelling a vessel by means of a turbine was first put into practical form. Before that time the turbine had never been used for marine purposes, but its use had been devoted to pumping, coaling driving fans forced draught and ventilating purposes. The first vessel to be fitted with turbine engines was the Turbinia. Then came torpedo boat destroyers, the Viper and Cobra, achieved remarkable speed, but unfortunately were both lost before it was able to obtain comparisons in service with other destroyers, and this somewhat adversely effected the progress of the turbine engine generally."[9]

Furthermore the "British cruiser Amethyst was the next step of the application of the turbine war vessels, and the result of the trail of this vessel in compared with sister vessels ordered at the same time and of the same dimensions and lines, butt fitted with other engines demonstrated the economy of the turbine to fit to this class of vessels and more especially of higher power."[9]

Publications

  • Horace See, Some Sea Specialties. New York. 1899, 1906.
Articles, a selection
Patents, a selection[10]
Publications about Horace See
  • Charles Morris, "Horace See," in: Men of affairs in New York, New York : L.R. Hamersley, 1906. p. 100-102 (also online here)

References

  1. ^ William duBarry Thomas. Speed on the ship!: a centennial history of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, 1893-1993. 1993, p. 11.
  2. ^ a b c d e f American Society of Mechanical Engineers, "Horace See, President of the Society in 1888, died in New York City on December 14, 1909." in: Journal of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Jan-Apr 1910. p. 23 (p. 309)
  3. ^ Philip Scranton. Endless Novelty: Specialty Production and American Industrialization, 1865-1925. 2000. p. 104
  4. ^ Greg H. Williams (2014), The Liberty Ships of World War II: A Record of the 2,710 Vessels and Their Builders, Operators and Namesakes, with a History of the Jeremiah O'Brien. p. 92
  5. ^ Carl W. Hall (2008). "A Biographical Dictionary of People in Engineering." p. 194
  6. ^ Philip Scranton. Endless Novelty: Specialty Production and American Industrialization, 1865-1925. p. 104
  7. ^ "The Sibley College lecture," The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume VII, Nr. 90, 1 March 1887
  8. ^ Horace See, The Franklin Institute. Accessed 07.05.2017.
  9. ^ a b c d The New York Times, Sunday, September 15, 1907, p. 41
  10. ^ For more patents, see here