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'''Count Rumford''' was born as Benjamin Thompson on 26 March 1753 in
'''Count Rumford''' was born as Benjamin Thompson on 26 March 1753 in
Woburn Massachusetts.  He died in Auteuil near Paris on 21 August 1814.
Woburn Massachusetts.  He died in Auteuil near Paris on 21 August 1814.

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Count Rumford was born as Benjamin Thompson on 26 March 1753 in Woburn Massachusetts. He died in Auteuil near Paris on 21 August 1814. Count Rumford built up during his lifetime an international reputation as a soldier, statesman, scientist, inventor and social reformer in America, England, Bavaria and France. He was a colonel in the British Army; was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in England in 1779; was knighted by King George III in 1781; and was made a Count of the Holy Roman Empire by the Duke of Bavaria in 1792.

Biography

Benjamin Thompson was the son of a Massachusetts farmer who died when Benjamin was twenty months old. The boy visited grade school in Woburn leaving school at the age of thirteen. After that Benjamin Thompson took care of his own education and studied chemistry, physics, and anatomy. At the age of nineteen, in November 1772, he married a rich, eleven years older, widow. His wife introduced him to te ruling circles of New England where he made such an impression that at the age of twenty he received a major's commission in the second New Hampshire Regiment, even though he had no military experience whatsoever.

Years of war of independence

During the American war of Independence (1775-1783) Major Thompson became a loyalist, that is, he chose the side of the British. While staying in Boston he did some spying on the revolutionary army. When Boston was taken by the Americans on 17 March 1776 Thompson fled to England leaving his wife and daughter behind. He would never see his wife again, but his daughter Sarah would join him in Europe twenty years later, in March 1796.

In England he befriended Lord George Germain, the Secretary of State for the Colonies in the cabinet of Lord North. Thompson provided Germain with accurate information about the progress of the American war and in return Germain gave Thompson an entry into English society. Germain's influence with King George III procured Thompson an appointment as Secretary of the Province of Georgia, which although a meaningless sinecure, brought him £100 per annum. This position left him enough time to perform an important series of scientific experiments on the properties of gunpowder. He investigated whether humid—water containing—gunpowder was more forceful than dry powder, as was often thought. He deviced a very clever experimental setup, with both the gun and its heavy wooden target as free-swinging pendulums, so that he could measure accurately the forces of recoil and impact. He found that the vaporization of water did not improve the quality of gunpowder, or in other words, dry gunpowder works better. He published his findings in a 99-page paper entitled New Experiments upon Gunpowder, in the 1781 volume of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Its scientific worth was recognized and Thompson was made a Fellow of the Royal Society at the age of twenty-seven.

Thompson climbed rapidly in English society and in 1779 he was appointed deputy to the Inspector General of Provincial Forces. This gave Thomposn sole administrative responsibility for providing clothing and other stores for the British colonial armed forces. This position enabled him to make good money. He was able to take advantage of the fact that silk, widely used in uniforms, is hygroscopic; dry silk bought in London would absorb 10 percent of its weight in the journey across the Atlantic. So, there was considerable profit to be made by selling and buying silk by weight. It was reported that Thompson made for himself about £7000 per year, but nobody seemed to mind and in 1780 he was promoted to Under Secretary of State for the Colonies.

In February 1781 he bought himself (for the sum of £4500) an appointment as lieutenant-colonel of the King's American dragoons. He left his post as Under Secretary quite unexpectedly when he sailed for New York on 7 October 1781. His ship was blown off course and he landed in Charleston almost two months later (29 December). In America the war was going very badly for the British and it took Thompson until April before he arrived in New York. Here he started to enlist men for his regiment and by August 1782 the King's American Dragoons were ready for service. However, soon after (on 30 November 1782) the hostilities ceased and peace was signed on 3 September 1783. Before that Thompson got promotion to full colonel, and after the war he retired on half-pay for the rest of his life, even though he had served in the British army only for about sixteen months.

Bavarian years

Without any specific plans Thompson traveled in the fall of 1783 to middle Europe with the intention of possibly doing a bit of soldiering. But it turned out that Europe was peaceful at that particular time and had no need of British colonels. Soon the American farmer's son befriended Prince Maximilian von Zweibrücken, which was an amazing feat given the class consciousness and the importance attached to noble birth in eighteenth century Europe. Through Maximilian's influence Thompson became colonel in the Bavarian army and aide-de-camp to the Prince-Elector (German: Kurfürst) of Bavaria, Karl II (Karl Philipp Theodor, 1724 - 1799). In those days Bavaria was an independent state within the Holy Roman Empire.

But, before Thompson could accept this position he had to return to England to ask for permission as technically he was still a servant of King George III of Britain. The English government saw his appointment as an excellent chance to gain influence in Bavaria, and did not only grant him permission but also knighted him. Sir Benjamin was free to accept any position in Bavaria he wanted. Thompson would stay in Bavaria for twelve years climbing through the ranks. He became Minister of War with the rank of major-general, Minister of Police, Chamberlain to he Court and State Councillor. On 9 May 1792 Karl II promoted him to the rank and dignity of the Imperial Counts of the Holy Roman Empire. Sir Benjamin Thompson FRS chose the title Count Rumford, after the New Hampshire town Rumford (now Concord).

By and large Thompson deserved these honors, because he had a great impact for the good on Bavarian society, which was in a very bad shape before Thompson's arrival. It was estimated that about five percent of Bavarians lived on begging. Some gangs of beggars had Mafia-like proportions. The Bavarian army was in disarray, with about a quarter of the men being officers. Although Bavaria is completely landlocked and had no navy, it did have a great admiral. The common soldiers were mainly conscripted, unwilling, and untrained peasants. Full of energy Thompson tackled these problems. He increased the pay of the soldiers and set up schools to educate them; he established a military academy for the training of officers and he introduced scientific principles in nutrition, so that the men were fed well (and for less cost). He also reorganized the manufacturing of cannon.

With regard to the problem of the many beggars he had the simple plan to round them all up and employ them in workhouses to make military uniforms. This plan worked to a large extent since Thompson took care that the regime in the workhouses was benign and inmates were trained in a wide variety of skills and paid on a piecework basis. The social experiment was a success and many beggars were reabsorbed into society. Another great success was Thompson's construction of the "English Garden", which still exists in the city of Munich today. When it opened to the public in 1791 it was the finest park in Europe.

Politically the situation was shifting in the wrong direction for Count Rumford—as Benjamin Thompson was then called—at the end of 1792. During his energetic enterprises he had made many enemies in Munich and, moreover, his protector, Karl II, was ageing and losing power. So in March 1793 the count found it opportune to be out of sight for a while and went on holidays to Italy. Here he stayed for almost sixteen months. When Rumford returned to Bavaria in the summer of 1794, the political situation was still the same—not very favorable for the Count. While in Italy Rumford had met Alessandro Volta and the secretary of the Royal Society who happened to be in Italy also. These meetings inspired Rumford to spend more time on science. The Elector granted the Count six months leave of absence to pursue his scientific endeavors, which Rumford decided to spend in London.

Back in England

Back in England Count Rumford wrote several essays about his work in Munich on bettering the conditions of the poor. New work was his article on the improvement of the construction of chimneys. He used his understanding of convection to design a better fireplace, with a shelf at the back of the chimney so that cold air falling down the chimney struck this shelf and was deflected to join the hot air rising from the fire. This prevented clouds of smoke entering the room. In London Rumford was appreciated as a scientist and a statesman and he stretched his leave to almost a year. His daughter Sally (Sarah) joining him in March 1796, the Count felt so benevolent to mankind that he endowed two prize medals with his own money. One was to the Royal Society in London and the other to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in Boston. They are still awarded by both institutions today.

In August 1796 Count Rumford could not postpone his return to Munich any longer because the city was in great danger. It was caught in the middle between opposing French and Austrian armies and the powers ruling Munich thought that a foreigner would be a convenient scapegoat if the town were invaded. So Rumford became Town Commandant. The Austrians set up camp on the North side of town and the French to the west. Each army was determined to occupy Munich, but Rumford, shuttling between the camps and playing for time, managed to avoid triggering any conflict until the French were pulled out following the defeat of another French army. Rumford, who had defended Munich without a drop of blood being shed, was honored by a monument in the English garden and his daughter was made Countess. When the danger was over, Rumford found time to do his famous cannon boring experiments that established the thermodynamic connection between heat and work. However, Rumford's impopularity with the ruling classes grew with the day, and it seemed better all around that Rumford would return to England. As a face-saving resolution the Elector appointed Count Rumford to Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of St James (Bavarian Ambassador in London), where Rumford arrived 19 September 1798.

Back in London he found that King George III did not accept his credentials because as a British national he could not serve a foreign government. The King's decision turned out well for science, because Rumford found the time to establish a combined museum, research and educational institute, which was granted the Royal Seal in Januari 1800 to become the Royal Institution of Great Britain. The first professor of the Royal Institution, Thomas Garnett, was soon replaced by Humphry Davy, who was to make the institution a huge success in promoting the public understanding of the natural sciences.

Last years in Paris

Soon after appointing Davy, Rumford visited Munich to pay his respects to the successor of Elector Karl Theodor (Karl II). The new Elector was his old friend Maximilian von Zweibrücken, who took the name Maximilian IV. (Shortly before the end of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806 he became King Maximilian I of Bavaria). On his way back to England Rumford stopped over in Paris where he made the acquaintance of the widow of Lavoisier. They started an affair and in 1804 the couple settled in a house in Paris. In October 1805, after Rumford received proof that his American wife was deceased, the couple married. Although they had had an affair for almost five years, they soon found that they were incompatible and separated after a couple of years. Rumford found a house in Auteuil about four miles from the center of Paris where he lived from 1808 until his death at the age of sixty-one.

Rumford's science

To be written

References

  • S.C. Brown, Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., (1979)
  • G.I. Brown, Scientist, Soldier, Statesman, Spy, Count Rumford, Sutton Publishing, Phoenix Mill (1999)
  • D. Kleppner, About Benjamin Thompson, Physics Today, vol. 45, p. 9 (1992)