“Man is a tool-using animal. Weak in himself, and of small stature, he stands on a basis, at most for the flattest soled, of some half square-foot, insecurely “Every structure or machine, whose design evinces the guidance of science, is to be regarded not merely as an instrument for promoting convenience and LONDON: ROBERTSON, BROOMAN, & CO., “MECHANICS MAGAZINE” & PATENT OFFICES, 166 FLEET STREET, E.C. PREFACE. N placing the Second Volume of our New Series before our readers we avail ourselves of the opportunity which a Preface affords for offering a few remarks that cannot well find a place elsewhere. We would first express our thanks for the firmness with which men of scientific tastes and pursuits continue to support, in its new form, this Magazine, which other pens than ours made popular many years ago. A thousand things have shown us during the past year that those old friends who long looked upon this journal with even more than a friendly interest, have not had their regards alienated by either the external or the internal changes which it has of late undergone. We have likewise had many proofs of the support which new friends are in various ways according us. By all these manifestations of good feeling we are delighted, and for them we are grateful. Many subjects of great importance have engaged our attention during the half-year which now expires. Among the earliest of them was that Admiralty Committee on Dockyard Economy, upon which some thousands of pounds of public money were squandered, and which did its best to effect changes involving the squandering of many thousands more. We have good reason to believe that our simple explanations on this subject have left the Committee but little hope of accomplishing its designs. The Coinage of the Realm is another subject that has been discussed with manifest effect in our columns. The manufacture of the new bronze coinage, now in course of preparation, is an acknowledged concession to our representations and efforts. In the present activity of the War Department and the Admiralty in reference to Rifled Ordnance we believe we see a consequence of our urgent remonstrances, followed up as they were by the speeches of that veteran patriot, Lord Lyndhurst, in the House of Peers. The Great Eastern has occupied much of our attention, not altogether, we trust, without effect. It was not possible to speak of her in terms that would be pleasant to all parties, because, as a commercial speculation, she has excited an immense amount of partizanship ; moreover, since the memorable explosion which we had the pain of witnessing on her first sea trip, she has been continuously enveloped in a blaze of raging controversy. Happily we have had no interest in her to blind us, and no antipathies to colour what we have seen ; so that we have been able to offer unprejudiced and fearless criticisms on this subject, which have not, as we are often assured, been valueless. The abuse of the British Association-by which it was rendered a medium "for advertising inventions” rather than for advancing science—to which we, and we only, drew attention in October last, will in future, we are informed, be guarded against. The Royal Navy, to which we give much attention, and with which we claim a real although humble association, was never in a more prosperous or more efficient condition than it is at present. The movement made by the French in respect of iron-coated ships has been met in a most spirited manner by our Admiralty, and the remonstrances which we publicly made on this subject in May last have been followed by the issue of contracts for no less than four iron-defended ships for Her Majesty's Navy-all of them vessels which promise to be of unparelleled power and invulnerability. Our articles on the Theory of Ship-building and Laying-off have been slowly but steadily and carefully proceeded with, and will be continued until they become complete. In reference to Naval Architecture generally we have not been inactive, as is evidenced by the hostility which certain amateur writers on this subject are evincing towards us. The complaint of these gentlemen is, not that we do not understand naval architecture, or that we are devoid of the ability to express ourselves clearly in a literary sense, but that we have too much confidence in ourselves--too little respect for others---for them they mean, of course. We can only say we hope this is not so ; we shall certainly not believe it is until competent judges express the opinion. We will leave this subject by promising to all who are concerned in it--friends and“ unfriends”—an interesting novelty, which will come before them, we doubt not, before we pen another preface -a novelty that will gladden the hearts of all true lovers of the noble art of shipbuilding. We must not say more just at present. But we have said enough in this egotistical strain, and will therefore end here—end with the hope that, notwithstanding the proud burst of new literature with which the year 1860 is opening, our voice will still be waited for with interest, and listened to with attention. THE EDITORS. December, 1859. 1859 INDE X. 99 225 225 99 LEADING ARTICLES. National Defence, A Chinese Lesson on, 195 Commission, The, 145 81, 98, 259 National”Defences, Our, 113, 401 Naval Architects, The Education of, 837 Lesson by a French Admiral, A, 225 Naval Architects, The, 337 Navy, Anchors for the Royal, 49 Cunningham's System of Reefing Sails for the Royal, 290 Last Year's Increase of the, 33 in Scotland, The Institution of, 356 Lord Clarence Paget on the, 33 Rifled Guns for the, 49, 66 Exhibition of 1862, The, 321 Officers, The Training of Shipwright, 353 On Cast-iron, The Woolwich, 162 Ordnance, Rifled, 145 Explosions at Gunpowder Works, 2 Paget on the Navy, Lord Clarence, 33 Law Reform, 209 Office Library, The Great Seal, 292, 307 Penny Press and the New Coinage, The, 163 Poetry by the Poet Laureate, Working Men's, 132 Polytechnic, The Royal, 3 Pre-Adamite Mechanics and their Tools, 67 Founder of Mechanics’ Institutions, The, 253 Press and the New Coinage, The Penny, 163 Prince Consort, Science and the, 241 Progress, The Working Man, History of His, 68 Propeller, Sir Howard Douglas's Improvements of the Government and Merchant Shipbuilding, The Cost Screw, 194 of, 273 Purification of the Surpentine, The, 131 Dockyard Committee, The, 81, 98, 259 Rams, The Iron Steam. Frigates Or, 17 The, 97, 177, 193, 241, 401 Reefing Sails for the Royal Navy, Cunningham's System of, 290 Reform, Patent Law, 209 Rifled Cannon, The New American, 66 Guns for the Navy, 49, 66 Ordnance, 145 River Defences, Our, 130 Robert Stephenson, 257 Royal Charter, The Wreck of the, 289 Navy, Cunningham's System of Reefing Sails for the, 290 Polytechnic, The, 3 Inventions, The British Association for Advertising, Ruškin (Mr.), On the Workman and his Work, 274, 225 Sails for the Royal Navy, Cunningham's system of Reefing, 290 Scheme, The Vain Drainage, 100, 131, 305, 329 Steam Frigates or Rams, The, 17 Science and the Prince Consort, 211 The Woolwich Experiments on Cast, 182 The Study of, 300 Scotland, The Institution of Engineers in, 354 Screw Line-of-Battle Ship Victoria, The new, 305 Educated Female, 321 Propeller, Sir Howard Douglas's Improvements of the, 194 Ships, Our, 161 Serpentine, The Purification of the, 131 On National Defence, A Chinese, 195 Shilling, The Sovereign and the, 275 Shipbuilder Abroad, An American, 385 The Great Seal Patent Office, 292, 307 Shipbuilding in the Royal Dockyards, The Cost of, 50, 273 Ships, Auxiliary Steam-power in Merchant, 338 Our Screw, 161, The Compasses of Iron, 338, 354, 371 Unsinkable, 291, 305 Ship, The Greatest, 97, 177, 193, 241 Victoria, The New Screw Line-of-Battle, 305 Shipwright Officers, The Training of, 353 Main Drainage Scheme, The, 100, 131, 305, 322 Sovereign and the Shilling, The, 275 Steam Experiments, Mr. Fairbairn's, 274 Revolutionized, The Steel, 65 Frigates or Rams, The Iron, 17 Power in Merchant Ships, Auxiliary, 338 » Ship Economy, 243 The Decimal System of, 83 Ships, The Stokeholes of, 323 Steel Manufacture Revolutionized, The, 65 Stephenson, Robert, 257 50, 273 Merchant Shipbuilding, The Cost of Government Strike and Lock-Out, The Builders, 114, 161 and, 50, 273 Study of Science, The, 306 Ships, Auxiliary Steam-power in, 338 Submarine Telegraph Cable, Hearder's 227 Cables, 1, 83, 227, 293 322 New, 1 The Laying of, 66 93 |