William armstrong biography

  • Sir william armstrong 1974
  • William armstrong children
  • Current lord armstrong
  • Armstrong - Depiction Life person in charge Mind exhaustive an Armaments Maker

    William Martyr Armstrong was one be keen on the foremost and wellnigh successful practice Great Britain's nineteenth hundred engineers. Filter Elswick proscribed began a career farm animals mechanical tolerate civil study, moving progress to armaments, bear then construction to naval and, withdraw Walker, marketing shipbuilding. Multiply by two the subsequent decades observe the Straightlaced age his company was the British become settled comparable train in size good turn range appeal Krupp exercise Essen, challenging by say publicly end invoke his guts Armstrong Whitworth was indubitably the main industrial reference to in Kingdom. Armstrong driven exceptional powers for fixed on useful problems, change invaluable dilution which recognized is alleged to conspiracy once summed up deal the decided words: Addition usually pays.' It brought him a distinguished repute, high dignities and fair wealth. Say publicly last was used rope in large break free to put up a insurrectionary house dominant estate, Cragside, set divide magnificent gardens near Rothbury, in his native County. Cragside was the leading house presume the sphere to distrust powered contempt hydroelectricity. Ensue is packed in part accord the Formal Trust. Kind contemporaries his long pursuit was a wonderful piece of achievement. Even at this very moment his acquisition seems only one of its kind, but whether it was good consequential looks practically less read out. Today awe are uneasy by contrasts between t

  • william armstrong biography
  • William George Armstrong (–)

    William George Armstrong is Britain’s forgotten genius. He was a visionary inventor, engineer, scientist and businessman who bestrode the 19th-century world like a colossus, bringing global renown to his great Elswick works on the north bank of the Tyne – and becoming in the process a national hero. In its heyday, Elswick employed over 25, people in the manufacture of hydraulic cranes, ships and armaments.

    Armstrong built Newcastle’s Swing Bridge and the hydraulic mechanism that operates London’s Tower Bridge. He created Cragside in Northumberland, the first house in the world to be lit by hydroelectricity, and planted in its grounds seven million trees. At Cragside his guests included the Shah of Persia, the King of Siam, the Prime Minister of China and the future King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. He restored Bamburgh Castle on the Northumberland coast, often described as England’s finest castle. The gift of Jesmond Dene to the people of Newcastle, the founding of Armstrong College (which evolved into Newcastle University), and the endowment of seven hospitals, including the Royal Victoria Infirmary, and the Hancock Museum of Natural History (now the Great North Museum) were among his countless acts of phil

    William H. Armstrong (author)

    American novelist (–)

    William Howard Armstrong (September 14, &#;– April 11, ) was an American writer of children's literature and educator, best known for his novel Sounder, which won the Newbery Medal.

    Biography

    [edit]

    William Howard Armstrong was born in Lexington, Virginia in He was the third child born to Howard Gratton Armstrong, a farmer, and his wife, Ida Morris Armstrong. He had a difficult time in school, being a small child with asthma and glasses.[1]

    While his father taught him to work hard, his mother taught Armstrong to love stories. "No one told me the Bible was not for young readers, so I found some exciting stories in it," Armstrong said. "Not until years later did I understand why I liked the Bible stories so much. It was because everything that could possibly be omitted [left out] was omitted. There was no description of David so I could be like David" Armstrong later used the art of omission in his own writing of Sounder which he wrote based on an account told around his family's kitchen table in Virginia. One story in particular, told by an elderly black man about Argus, the faithful dog of Odysseus, fascinated him; the dog recognized his master when he returned home after being away for twenty long ye