Hyman Herman

Hyman Herman (August 16, 1875 – June 7, 1962) was a geologist and engineer, and was described as the 'father of Yallourn'. He was director of the Victorian Department of Mines and chair of the Government Brown Coal Advisory Committee. He was instrumental in the establishment of the Victorian State Electricity Commission taking a role as engineer for brown coal.[1]

Hyman Herman
Born(1875-08-16)16 August 1875
Died7 June 1962(1962-06-07) (aged 86)
Melbourne, Australia
NationalityBritish
CitizenshipAustralia
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
Disciplinegeologist and engineer
InstitutionsState Electricity Commission of Victoria

Herman was born at Sandhurst (Bendigo) on 16 August 1875 to Polish father Solomon Herman from Konin, British mother Elizabeth, née Oxlake who migrated to Australia in 1864. He married Florence Leslie Ramsay Salmon 2 April 1902, had three daughters and died on 7 June 1962.

As chair of the Government Brown Coal Advisory Committee, which reported in September 1917, he recommended the establishment of an Electricity Commission to develop the brown coal reserves and construct a power station and transmission lines. In December 1918, a Bill was passed establishing the State Electricity Commission of Victoria.[2]

Education

Gravel Hill State School (under scholarships),

Sandhurst Corporate High School,

Scotch College 1890,

D.Sc. (Melbourne, 1924) he submitted 'The Structure of the Bendigo goldfields',

University of Melbourne engineering 1891 -1896.

B.C.E., 1896

Employment

  • Geological Survey, Victorian Department of Mines and Water Supply 1895
  • acting director of the Geological Survey 1900
  • assistant manager Mt Bischoff Tin Mining Co. Waratah.
  • private practice Queen Street Melbourne 1907
  • company director, consultant manager, Australian Mining Standard correspondent
  • director of the Victorian Geological Survey 1912
  • chairman of advisory committee on coal and electricity 1917
  • engineer SEC brown coal research and briquetting 1920
  • advisor to South Australian government on brown coal-mining 1926

Societies

He was a member of the Australasian Institute of Mining Engineers and its president for the year 1914

Commissions and conferences

  • Australian Power Survey 1928
  • World Power Conference in Washington 1936
  • royal commission on Western Australian coal industry 1931, 1933
  • consultant engineer S.E.C. 1933-48[3]

Publications

  • Brown Coal : with special reference to the State of Victoria, Commonwealth of Australia, State Electricity Commission of Victoria, Melbourne, 1952
  • Utilization of brown coal in Victoria Melb. : S.E.C.?
  • Report of the Advisory Committee on Brown Coal. Victoria. Advisory Committee on Brown Coal. Melbourne : Government Printer 1917

for a photographic Portrait see Museum Victoria

gollark: Nope! Tau dropped that ages ago.
gollark: Interesting fact: there is a dedicated PotatOS backup bunker in case of all life on the surface of the overworld being wiped out. It's a solid sphere of bedrock buried in some location somewhere with storage, dedicated melon machines, a trilaterator, and a copy of the potatOS DSK.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: After the Guardian Incident potatOS does not have EZCopy™ enabled on SC, even though that was caused by a bizarre CC race condition or something.
gollark: That's the official line, anyway, yes.

References

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