Hiram Stevens Maxim

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Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim
Maxim portrait.jpg
Hiram S. Maxim, ca. 1916
Born February 5, 1840
Sangerville, Maine
Died November 24, 1916 (age 76)
London, England
Nationality American, later British
Occupation Inventor
Known for The Maxim gun and the mousetrap
This page is about the elder Hiram Stevens, inventor of the Maxim Gun. For his son, inventor of the Maxim Silencer and co-founder of the ARRL, see Hiram Percy Maxim

Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim (February 5, 1840 - November 24, 1916) was an inventor born in the U.S. who emigrated to England and adopted British citizenship, best known as the inventor of the Maxim Gun, the first portable, fully automatic machine gun.

He also invented the ubiquitous mousetrap, laid a claim to inventing the lightbulb, and experimented with powered flight - his large aircraft designs were never successful, but his "Captive Flying Machine" amusement ride (designed as a means by which to fund his research while generating public interest in flight) was very successful.

Contents

Personal life

Maxim was born in Sangerville, Maine in the United States of America. He became an apprentice coachbuilder at the age of 14 and ten years later took up a job at the machine works of his uncle, Levi Stephens, at Fitchburg, Massachusetts. He subsequently worked as an instrument maker and as a draughtsman.

His brother, Hudson Maxim, was also a military inventor, specializing in explosives.

He married his first wife, Jane Budden, in 1867. Their children were: Hiram Percy Maxim; Florence Maxim, who married George Albert Cutter, and Adelaide Maxim, who married Eldon Joubert, Ignacy Jan Paderewski's piano tuner.

He married his second wife, Sarah, daughter of Charles Hayes of Boston, in 1881. (Cheekily enough, it is not clear if he was legally divorced from his first wife at this time.)

Maxim emigrated to England in 1881 and became a naturalized Briton in 1899. Queen Victoria knighted Maxim in 1901 for his inventions, many of which had military applications.

Maxim was a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour; a Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineer; Member of the London Chamber of Commerce; Member of the Royal Institution; Member of the British Association for the Advancement of Science; Member of the British Empire League; and Member of the Royal Society of Arts.[1]

The Maxim machine gun

Main article: Maxim gun
1895 .303 tripod mounted Maxim machine gun. Photo: Max Smith
Leftquot.png In 1882 I was in Vienna, where I met an American whom I had known in the States. He said: "Hang your chemistry and electricity! If you want to make a pile of money, invent something that will enable these Europeans to cut each others' throats with greater facility." Rightquot.png
Hiram Maxim[2]

As a child, Maxim had been knocked over by a rifle's recoil (weren't we all?), and this inspired him to use that recoil force to automatically operate a gun. Between 1883 and 1885 Maxim patented gas, recoil and blow-back methods of operation. After moving to England, he settled in a large house formerly owned by Lord Thurlow in West Norwood where he developed his design for an automatic weapon, using an action that would close the breech and compress a spring, by storing the recoil energy released by a shot to prepare the gun for its next shot. He thoughtfully ran announcements in the local press warning that he would be experimenting with the gun in his garden and that neighbours should keep their windows open to avoid the danger of broken glass.[3]

Maxim founded an armaments company to produce his machine gun in Crayford, Kent, which later merged with Nordenfeldt and the Vickers Corporation in 1896, becoming 'Vickers, Son & Maxim'. Their updated design, referred to as the Vickers gun after Maxim's resignation from the board in 1911 on his 71st birthday, was the standard British machine gun for many years. With arms sales led by Basil Zaharoff, variants of the Maxim gun were bought and used extensively - by both sides - during World War I.

In his later years Maxim became profoundly deaf, as his hearing had been damaged by years of exposure to the noise of his guns.[4] This was a significant motivator for his son, Hiram Percy, who followed in his father's and uncle's footsteps and became a mechanical engineer and weapons designer, inventing the "Maxim Silencer" for noise suppression. Sadly, it came too late to save his father's hearing.[5]

Maxim died in London and is buried in West Norwood Cemetery.

Other inventions

Maxim invented a lot more than just guns. He is also credited with inventing the common mousetrap (no doubt his most ubiquitous creation, even to this day) and, as a long-time sufferer from bronchitis, he also patented and manufactured a pocket menthol inhaler and a larger steam inhaler using pine vapour, that he claimed could relieve asthma, tinnitus, hay fever and catarrh.[6] After being accused of applying his talents to quackery, he protested that: "it will be seen that it is a very creditable thing to invent a killing machine, and nothing less than a disgrace to invent an apparatus to prevent human suffering".[2]

He also invented a curling iron, an apparatus for demagnetizing watches, magno-electric machines, devices to prevent the rolling of ships, eyelet and riveting machines, aircraft artillery, an aerial torpedo gun, coffee substitutes, and various oil, steam, and gas engines.[7]

Maxim developed and installed the first electric lights in a New York City building (the Equitable Insurance Company Building at 120 Broadway) in the late 1870s.[2] However, he was involved in several lengthy patent disputes with Thomas Edison over his claims to the lightbulb. One of these actions regarded the incandescent bulb, for which Maxim claimed that Edison was credited by means of his better understanding of patenting law (though in England Joseph Wilson Swan had already obtained the first patent in 1878). He claimed an employee of his (Maxim's) had falsely patented the invention under his own name, and that Edison proved the employee's claim to be false, knowing that patent law would mean the invention would become public property, allowing Edison to manufacture the lightbulb without crediting Maxim as the true inventor.

Flying machines

Maxim's father had earlier conceived of a helicopter powered by two counter-rotating rotors, but was unable to find a powerful enough engine to build it. Hiram first sketched out plans for a helicopter in 1872, but when he built his first "flying machine" he chose to use wings. Commencing work in 1889, he built a 145' long craft that weighed 3.5 tons, with a 110' wingspan that was powered by two compound 360 horsepower steam engines driving two propellers.

In trials at Bexley in 1894 the ungainly contraption rode on 1800' of rails and was prevented from rising by outriggers underneath and wooden safety rails overhead, somewhat in the manner of a roller coaster.[8] His apparent goal in building this machine was not to soar freely, but to test if it would lift off the ground. During its test run all of the outriggers were engaged, showing that it had developed enough lift to take off, but in so doing it damaged the track; the "flight" was aborted in time to prevent disaster. The craft was almost certainly aerodynamically unstable and uncontrollable, which Maxim probably realized, because he subsequently abandoned work on it.

Captive Flying Machines

In order to both fund his research into flight and to popularise the notion of flight, Maxim designed and built an amusement ride for the Earl's Court exhibition of 1904. The ride was based on a test rig he had devised for his research, and consisted of a large spinning frame from which cars hung captive. As the machine spun, the cars would be swung outward through the air, simulating flight. The ride was similar to the later Circle Swing ride, popularised in the USA by renowned roller coaster designer Harry Traver.

Maxim originally intended to use primitive aerofoils and wings to allow riders to control their flight, but this was outlawed as unsafe. As a result, Maxim quickly lost interest in the project, declaring the adapted ride as "Simply a glorified merry-go-round". Nevertheless, his company built several more rides of various sizes at The Crystal Palace and various seaside resorts including Southport, New Brighton, and Blackpool, all of which opened in 1904. Maxim had only intended to build two, but a lengthy breakdown on the original Earl's Court ride forced him to build more in order to make the venture profitable. He had plans for further variations of the ride but his disillusionment with the amusement business meant that they were never realised.

Although he expressed regrets about the whole project, the rides were held in high regard within the amusement industry and the Blackpool ride still operates to this day as part of what is now the Pleasure Beach amusement park. Along with the same park's similarly historic River Caves, it is the oldest operating amusement ride in Europe. The Flying Machines has the distinction of being virtually unchanged from Maxim's original design. The Blackpool ride's name is now usually abbreviated to the "Flying Machine" or "Flying Machines", although the full name, "Sir Hiram Maxim's Captive Flying Machines", is given at the ride entrance.

In 2001 Disney's California Adventure opened, featuring the Golden Zephyr, a modern day recreation of the Traver version of the ride. The ride itself is much smaller than the Blackpool version with cars swinging out to a much less severe angle. Nevertheless, engineers from Disney visited Blackpool to inspect the Maxim ride (the only example of either version still standing) in order to help design their ride.

Grahame-White, Blériot, and Maxim Company

In 1911 he headed the newly formed Grahame-White, Blériot, and Maxim Company, founded with the two aviators and two hundred thousand pounds of capital. He had hoped to produce military aircraft capable of scouting or dropping a 500-lb bomb, but his failing health and financial difficulties with his other enterprises restricted his ability to develop this enterprise before his death.

Books

Artificial and Natural Flight[9]

Li Hung Chang's Scrapbook [1]

A New System of Preventing Collisions at Sea [10]

Patents

  • U.S. Patent 430,212 - Manufacture of explosive
  • GB189700207 (1897 with Louis Silverman) - automatic fire mechanism
  • GB189607468 (1897) - gas action for machine guns
  • GB189607045 (1897) - breech mechanism of machine gun

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Hiram Stevens Maxim (1913). Li Hung Chang's Scrapbook. Watts & Co.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Malcolm Brown 100 years of 'Maxim's Killing Machine' New York Times, 26 November 1985
  3. Ben Weinreb & Christopher Hibbert, The London Encyclopedia, ISBN 0-333-57688-8 Serbia House
  4. Action By Sir Hiram Maxim, The Times, 16 January 1915
  5. "Noise's Bogeyman". Time Magazine, January 4, 1932. "While mental hygienists, efficiency experts and city officials have been bewailing the maddening effects of city noise, Hiram Percy Maxim has been manufacturing noise mufflers at Hartford, Conn. Last week he announced that his Maxim Silencer Co., of which he is president and his only son Hiram Hamilton is chief engineer and whose factory is in Asylum Street, Hartford, will — besides continuing to make silencers for guns, motor exhausts, safety valves, air releases, in fact every kind of pipe which emits a gas — offer a consulting service in noise abatement."
  6. The Times, Sir Hiram Maxim's great Invention, 19 July 1910
  7. Hiram's inventions
  8. "Death Of Sir Hiram Maxim. A Famous Inventor, Automatic Guns And Aeronautics". The Times. 25 November 1916.
  9. Hiram Stevens Maxim (1908). Artificial and Natural Flight. Whittaker.
  10. Hiram Stevens Maxim. A New System of Preventing Collisions at Sea. Schwarz Press. ISBN 1444605534.

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