Louis-François-Clement Breguet

Louis Francois Clement Breguet (December 22, 1804- October 27, 1883),[1] was a French physicist and watchmaker,[2] noted for his work in the early days of telegraphy. He was the grandson of Abraham-Louis Breguet, founder of the watch manufacturing company Breguet.

He was a maker of scientific instruments such as recording instruments, an electric thermometer, telegraph instruments and electrically synchronized clocks. Louis was educated in Switzerland.

He became manager of Breguet et Fils watchmakers in 1833 after his father Louis Antoine Breguet retired. Between 1835 and 1840 he standardized the company product line of watches (then making 350 watches per year), and diversified into scientific instruments and electrical devices.

With Alphonse Foy, in 1842 he developed an electrical needle telegraph to replace the optical telecgraph system then in use.[3] and a later step-by-step telegraph system (1847) was applied to French railways and exported to Japan.

In 1843 he was appointed to the Bureau of Longitudes. In 1845 Breguet was awarded the Legion d'Honneur.

He observed in 1847 that small wires could be used to protect telegraph installations from lightning, the ancestor of the fuse (electricity).

In 1856 he designed a public network of synchronized electric clocks for the center of Lyon.

He also manufactured the rotating mirror Fizeau–Foucault apparatus, used by Leon Foucault and Hippolyte Fizeau to measure the speed of light (1850).

In 1866 he patented an electric clock controlled by a 100 Hz tuning fork.[4]

In 1870 he transferred the leadership of the company to Edward Brown. Breguet then focused entirely on the telegraph and the nascent field of telecommunications. He collaborated in the development of an induction coil, later improved by Heinrich Ruhmkorff.

He was made a member of the French Academy of Sciences in 1874 [5]. He is one of the 72 French scientists whose names are written around the base of the Eiffel Tower.[6]

Breguet was married and had one son Antoine (1851–1882) who also joined the family electrical business.[7]. With his son, he met Alexander Graham Bell and obtained a license to manufacture Bell telephones for the French market.[8] Grandfather of Louis Charles Breguet, aviation pioneer and aircraft manufacturer.

References

  1. ^ Nature July 15, 1886, volume 34, page 259
  2. ^ Carl W. Hall A biographical dictionary of people in engineering, Purdue University Press, 2008 ISBN 1557534594, p. 26
  3. ^ Huurdeman page 73
  4. ^ http://www.crazywatches.pl/tuning-fork retrieved 2010 09 10
  5. ^ Maurice Crosland Science Under Control: The French Academy of Sciences 1795-1914 Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 052152475X p.140
  6. ^ Hubert Chanson, Hydraulic Engineering Legends Listed on the Eiffel Tower, in Jerry R. Rogers (ed) Great rivers history: proceedings and invited papers for the EWRI Congress and History Symposium, ASCE Publications, 2009 , ISBN 0784410321 , page 6
  7. ^ http://www.montmollin.ch/docs/breguet-abram-louis.pdf retrieved 2010 09 10
  8. ^ Anton A. Huurdeman The worldwide history of telecommunications page 168