Home Bright Sparcs
Biographical entry

Home | Browse | Search | Previous | Next
Be a Bright Sparcs Supporter

Kirkby, Edward Hope (1853 - 1915)

Online Sources
Inventor and Electrical engineer
Born: 31 December 1853.  Died: 28 July 1915  New South Wales, Australia.
Edward Hope Kirkby was a pioneer of the introduction of radio services to Australia, and a major contributor to fire protection and X-Ray development in Australia. He was an avid inventor of electrical devices including the automatic clockwork fire brigade alarm transmitter, Street Fire Alarm System, Watchman's telltale clock, auxiliary fire call points, door release magnets, clockwork time switches, and the Kirkby patented alarm that connected to the Grinnell sprinkler system. He also designed and installed the communications and switchboards for connecting the fire system to the fire brigade, built the Shaw Wireless Works at Randwick and was the official timekeeper to the Australian Jockey Club designing and constructing their automatic timekeeping system.

Career Highlights
Edward Hope Kirkby was born on New Years Eve 1853 on board the ship SS Hope just 16 days out of Port Phillip. The family settled in Sandhurst (Bendigo) where he was educated and started his watchmaker jeweller business. He moved to Williamstown in Victoria and then to New South Wales in about 1906 where he built the Shaw Wireless Works. These works built most of the radio equipment for the Coastal Radio Service. In 1908 Kirkby patented an improved apparatus for conveying an alarm from premises where sprinklers are installed to a distant station – this was the first sprinkler alarm for fire protection in Australia. His devices were made under licence by Wormald Bros. Within twelve months of Roentgen discovered X-Ray, Kirkby (1895) had built a fully operational X-Ray apparatus which he experimented on at the Williamstown Hospital to test the machine’s practical uses.
 
Online Sources

Google
Structure based on ISAAR(CPF) - click here for an explanation of the fields.Prepared by: Annette Alafaci
Created: 21 June 2006

Published by The University of Melbourne eScholarship Research Centre on ASAPWeb, 1994 - 2007
Originally published 1994-1999 by Australian Science Archives Project, 1999-2006 by the Australian Science and Technology Heritage Centre
Disclaimer, Copyright and Privacy Policy
Submit any comments, questions, corrections and additions
Prepared by: Acknowledgements
Updated: 26 February 2007
http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/bsparcs/biogs/P004701b.htm

[ Top of page | Bright Sparcs Home | Browse | Search ]