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School of Mathematics and Naval Construction

Coordinates:50°48′1″N1°6′26″W / 50.80028°N 1.10722°W /50.80028; -1.10722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Central School of Mathematics and Naval Construction
Part of the 1815 building (left) in Portsmouth Dockyard alongside 18th-century storehouses (right)
Active1848–1853
CountryUnited Kingdom
Branch Royal Navy
TypeTraining
RoleMathematics and Naval Construction
Garrison/HQPortsmouth
Military unit

TheCentral School of Mathematics and Naval Construction was a short-lived shipbuilding college atPortsmouth Dockyard on the south coast of England. It was founded in 1848 but only lasted five years, until 1853. The first Principal wasJoseph Woolley, who in 1864 would found theRoyal School of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering inSouth Kensington that became part of theRoyal Naval College, Greenwich in 1873.

Building

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The school was sited in the dockyard atPortsea, Portsmouth in the building formerly used by the School of Naval Architecture (1816–1832), facing the Commissioner’s house and Old Naval Academy. It is 176 ft (53.6 m) long by 45 ft (13.7 m) wide and 36 ft (11.0 m) high, to a design by Edward/Edmund Hall. Construction began in 1815 and was completed in 1817. The building has since seen use as a residence, Port Admirals Office, Tactical School, War College, NATO and Naval HQ and C in C Western Fleet Offices.[1]

Education

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The School of Mathematics and Naval Construction was intended as a finishing school for a select number of shipwright apprentices, to prepare them as officers in the dockyards. They were sent to the school for the final three years of their seven-year apprenticeship, to be taught mathematics by Wooley and shipbuilding by the master shipwright of the dockyard. Unusually, they were also taught chemistry in a laboratory created at the back of the school for the use of W.J. Hay, the chemical assistant of the dockyard.

Alumni

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  • SirEdward James Reed - Chief Constructor of the Royal Navy from 1863 until 1870
  • SirNathaniel Barnaby - Reed's successor and brother-in-law
  • Frederick Kynaston Barnes - Naval Architect

References

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  1. ^"Before the dawn – early origins"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 4 October 2011.

Further reading

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  • H. W.Dickinson, 'Joseph Woolley - Pioneer of British Naval Education; 1848 - 1873',Education Research and Perspectives (2007) 34(1) pages 1–26
  • "The Training of Shipwright Officers".The Mechanics' Magazine and Journal of Engineering, Agricultural Machinery, Manufactures, and Shipbuilding. Vol. II July–December 1859. London: Robertson, Brooman, & Co. 2 December 1859. p. 353.

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50°48′1″N1°6′26″W / 50.80028°N 1.10722°W /50.80028; -1.10722

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