E. Burnley Powell

Edwin Burnley Powell (September 23, 1880 – 1963)[1] was an American mechanical and consulting engineer. He was awarded the 1954 ASME Medal[2][3] for many years of consulting engineer.[4] The ASME had argued, that in these days he was "probably the most widely consulted engineer in the public-utility field."[5]

Biography

Youth, education and early career

Powell was born in Brookhaven, Mississippi in 1880 to Edward F. Powell and Hardinia (Burnley) Powell. He attended Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi, where he obtained his BSc in 1904.[6]

In 1900 Powell had started his career in 1900 at the New York Edison Company, now Consolidated Edison, at the meter and testing department. After his graduation in 1904 until 1907 he was as chemist in charge of the Chemical Laboratory & Mechanical Testing Department.[6]

Further career and acknowledgement

In 1907 Powell moved to the Stone & Webster engineering services company in Stoughton, Massachusetts, where he started as engineer on the engineering department.[7] From 1914 to 1920 he was betterment engineer, supervising charge betterment work on several power stations. In 1920 he was appointed consulting engineer for the organization,[8][6] specializing in power stations.[9]

In 1952 Powell was elected Fellow of ASME,[10] and in the same year he celebrated fifty years of continuous membership. In 1954 the ASME awarded his that year the ASME Medal for "distinguished service in engineering and science."[11]

Family

Powell married Jessie Elizabeth (Walker) Powell. Their son, Edwin Burnley Powell, Jr. (27 Sept. 1909 – June 1985) followed into his footsteps. He graduated from MIT in 1932[12] and published a series articles about a method of measuring and displaying generator rotor angles in the late 1950s.[13][14]

Selected publications

Articles, a selection
  • E. B. Powell. "Requirements in the Design of Steam Power Stations for Hydraulic Relay," Mech. Eng., vol.43, no. 10, Oct. 1921, pp. 650, 652 and 674
  • Powell, E. B. "Design of the Steam-Power Station for Hydraulic Relay." Power. Vol. 53, 12, pp. 482–5
gollark: It's the will of the people.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Supreme leader. I was elected to that role.
gollark: ALSO NOT THE POINT.
gollark: That is NOT THE POINT and you should realise that. Fortunately I can delete messages on my end with some inspect element hax.

References

  1. ASME. "Powell, Edwin BURNLEY Obituary." Transactions of the ASME. 1963. p. 131
  2. Claire Walter, Facts on File, Inc. Winners, the blue ribbon encyclopedia of awards. 1982. p. 485
  3. Linda S. Hubbard, Notable Americans: What They Did, from 1620 to the Present, 1988. p. 533.
  4. Carl Stripe, Combustion, Volumes 26-27. 1954. p. 54
  5. Mechanical Engineering. Volume 77. 1955. p. 86
  6. John William Leonard, Winfield Scott Downs, M. M. Lewis, Who's who in Engineering. Volume 9, 1964. p. 1486
  7. Stone & Webster Public Service Journal. Volume 32. 1923. p. 164
  8. Powell, 1925. ii
  9. Power, Volume 85. 1941. p. 84
  10. American Society for Testing Materials. Bulletin, Nr. 203-218. 1952.p . 76
  11. ASTM Bulletin, Nr. 203-218. 1955, p. 76
  12. Clarence Winthrop Bowen. The history of Woodstock, Connecticut. Vol. 6, p. 217
  13. .B. Powell, M.E. Harper. "Rotor angle by stroboscope." Journal of the IEE, Volume 4, Issue 43, 1958 , p. 387-388
  14. J. D. Ristroph and E. B. Powell, "Contamination of Condensate by Heat-Exchanger-Tube Alloys," Trans. Amer. Soc. Mech. Engrs,, 1953, 75, 729-745;
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.