Richard Bowyer Smith

Richard Bowyer Smith (2 September 1837 in London, England – 4 February 1919 in Subiaco, Western Australia) was an Australian inventor.

Richard Bowyer Smith
Born(1837-09-02)2 September 1837
London, England
Died4 February 1919(1919-02-04) (aged 81)
Resting placeKarrakatta Cemetery[1]
NationalityAustralian
Spouse(s)Margaret Hunter Smith (nee Smith) (1843–1915)
Parent(s)Smith Owen Smith (1807–1890) and Mary Ann Smith (nee Lee)
Plan of the original single-furrow plough.

Career

Smith migrated from London to South Australia with his parents Owen and Mary Ann Smith (née Lee), arriving on 15 May 1838.

He is reported as serving an apprenticeship as a wheelwright with J. G. Ramsay & Co. of Strathalbyn, South Australia.[2]

Under Smith's direction, his brother Clarence Herbert Smith created the first stump-jump plough, entitled the Vixen, in 1876. The South Australian government had offered a reward of £200 to anyone who could develop an effective mechanical stump puller due to frustration with lack of productivity efficiency on its farms with current equipment.

The plough consisted of any number of hinged shares: when the blade encountered an underground obstacle, it would rise out of the ground. Attached weights forced the blade back into the ground after the root was passed, allowing as much of the ground to be furrowed as possible. Although a little unorthodox, it proved remarkably effective, and was dubbed the "stump-jump" plough.

Smith took out a patent in 1877 for the design, but allowed it to lapse, though one report has him selling the patent rights to Mellor Brothers.[3] R. B. Smith was later credited as the inventor of the design by the Parliament of South Australia in 1882, despite controversy over the claim, and was awarded £500. His brother began manufacturing the parts in South Australia, whilst R. B. Smith relocated to Western Australia in 1884, demonstrating and marketing the plough he designed with little sales success and minimal profits.

After moving to Western Australia, Smith was the manager of a hotel from 1893 to 1895, and between 1895 and 1899 he operated 'railway refreshment rooms'. He then leased 181.5 acres (0.735 km2) of farmland at Beverley, where he resumed his passion for creating agricultural tools. He proceeded to then open a workshop in the Perth suburb of Highgate in 1912, having ended his lease of the farming land.

gollark: (Note: do not treat this as at all reliable in any way)
gollark: Isn't it just 10 times the regular cooler or whatever, so 1200?
gollark: Or 80 ticks (4 seconds). Who knows, really.
gollark: https://github.com/turbodiesel4598/NuclearCraft/blob/a39b2178a164eacbdfa8d94c18180e5e31688c14/src/main/java/nc/tile/fluid/TileActiveCooler.java
gollark: Okay, if I wildly guessed at what the code does correctly, they store 80 seconds worth.

References

  1. "Australia Deaths and Burials, 1816–1980", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XTHV-VZC : 12 December 2014), Richard Boyer Smith in entry for Margaret Hunter Smith, 5 Feb 1915; citing reference I12 P7; FHL microfilm 1,669,302.
  2. "Stump-Jumping Plough". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 5 March 1934. p. 18. Retrieved 22 June 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  3. "Concerning People". The Register. LXXXI (21, 631). Adelaide. 8 March 1916. p. 4. Retrieved 29 September 2017 via National Library of Australia.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.