Alfred Belpaire

Alfred J. Belpaire
Born Alfred Jules Belpaire
(1820-09-25)25 September 1820
Ostend, United Kingdom of the Netherlands
Died 27 January 1893(1893-01-27) (aged 72)
Schaarbeek, Belgium
Nationality Belgian
Alma mater École Centrale Paris
Occupation locomotive engineer
Known for Invented the Belpaire firebox

Alfred Jules Belpaire (25 September 1820 – 27 January 1893) was a Belgian locomotive engineer who invented the square-topped Belpaire firebox in 1864.

Belpaire was born in Ostend, and first studied at the Athenaeum School in Antwerp. He then became a student at the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures in Paris, France from 1837 to 1840 where he obtained a degree in mechanical engineering.

Belpaire was then employed at the Belgian State Railways , where he worked as a mechanical engineer for more than 50 years. He was first director of the railway workshops at Mechelen and then from 1850 put in charge of all materials and based in Brussels. He first developed a firebox to burn poor quality coals and then around 1860 generalised his invention into a robust thermally efficient design which bears his name. His firebox was used in locomotives in his native Belgium and also then extensively in Britain, North America and around the world.

Alfred Belpaire was one of the founders of the Congrès International des Chemins de Fer , of which he was president in 1891.

He died in Schaarbeek, aged 72.

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