John Bell (artillerist), Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

John Bell (artillerist)

18th century English artillerist, born 1747

Date of Birth: 01-Mar-1747

Place of Birth: Carlisle, England, United Kingdom

Date of Death: 01-Jun-1798

Profession: engineer

Zodiac Sign: Pisces


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About John Bell (artillerist)

  • John Bell (1 March 1747 – 1 June 1798) was an English artillerist. He was the eldest son of a hatter at Carlisle, Cumbria, where he was born.
  • His father ruined himself in attempts to discover the longitude.
  • In 1765 Bell joined the artillery.
  • He served at Gibraltar and afterwards in England.
  • He was at Southsea in 1782, and was an eye-witness of the foundering of the Royal George.
  • He invented a plan for destroying the wreck, which was the same as one carried out by Colonel Pasley in 1839.
  • He also invented the 'sunproof' for testing the soundness of guns, long in use in the royal arsenal; a 'gyn' called by his name, and a petard, of which there is a model in the Woolwich laboratory; a crane for descending mines; and a harpoon for taking whales (for the last two of which he received premiums from the Society of Arts); and an apparatus for rescuing shipwrecked mariners, said to be identical with that afterwards devised by Captain Manby.
  • For this he received a premium from the Society of Arts of fifty guineas, and in 1815 the House of Commons voted £500 to his daughter (Mrs.
  • Whitfield) in recognition of the same invention.
  • In 1793 the Duke of Richmond gave him a commission as second-lieutenant in the artillery.

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