Institution of Mechanical Engineers

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Institution of Mechanical Engineers

ImechE logo.png
Established
27 January 1847; 171 years ago (1847-01-27)
Founder
George Stephenson
Type
Professional association
Professional title

Chartered Mechanical Engineer
Headquarters
1 Birdcage Walk
London, SW1
Region served

Worldwide
Services
Professional accreditation
Library
Membership

120,000 (May 2018)
Key people

President: Tony Roche (August 2018)
Interim Chief executive: Dr Colin Brown (August 2018)
Website
www.imeche.org

The Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) is an independent professional association and learned society headquartered in London, United Kingdom, that represents mechanical engineers and the engineering profession. With over 120,000 members in 140 countries, working across industries such as railways, automotive, aerospace, manufacturing, energy, biomedical and construction, the Institution is licensed by the Engineering Council to assess candidates for inclusion on its Register of Chartered Engineers, Incorporated Engineers and Engineering Technicians.


The Institution was founded at the Queen's Hotel, Birmingham, by George Stephenson in 1847. It received a Royal Charter in 1930. The Institution's headquarters, purpose-built for the Institution in 1899, is situated at No. 1 Birdcage Walk in central London.




Contents





  • 1 Origins


  • 2 Birdcage Walk


  • 3 Membership grades and post-nominals


  • 4 Awards


  • 5 Presidents

    • 5.1 List of presidents



  • 6 Engineering Committees


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 Footnotes


  • 10 Sources


  • 11 External links




Origins




George Stephenson


Informal meetings are said to have taken place in 1846, at locomotive designer Charles Beyer's house in Cecil Street, Manchester,[a] or alternatively at Bromsgrove at the house of James McConnell, after viewing locomotive trials at the Lickey Incline.[1] Beyer, Richard Peacock, George Selby, Archibald Slate and Edward Humphrys were present. Bromsgrove seems the more likely candidate for the initial discussion, not least because McConnell was the driving force in the early years.[2] A meeting took place at the Queen's Hotel in Birmingham to consider the idea further on 7 October and a committee appointed with McDonnell at its head to see the idea to its inauguration.[3]


The Institution of Mechanical Engineers was then founded on 27 January 1847, in the Queen's Hotel next to Curzon Street station in Birmingham by the railway pioneer George Stephenson and others.[4] McConnnell became the first chairman.[1] The founding of the Institution was said by Stephenson's biographer Samuel Smiles to have been spurred by outrage that Stephenson, the most famous mechanical engineer of the age, had been refused admission to the Institution of Civil Engineers unless he sent in "a probationary essay as proof of his capacity as an engineer".[5] However, this account has been challenged as part of a pattern of exaggeration on Smiles' part aimed at glorifying the struggles that various Victorian mechanical engineers had to overcome in their personal efforts to attain greatness.[6] Though there was certainly coolness between Stephenson and the Institution of Civil Engineers, it is more likely that the motivation behind the founding of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers was simply the need for a specific home for the growing number of mechanical engineers employed in the burgeoning railway and manufacturing industries.[5]


Beyer proposed that George Stephenson become the Institution's first president in 1847,[7] followed by his son, Robert Stephenson, in 1849. Beyer became vice-president and was one of the first to present papers to the Institution;[8]Charles Geach was the first treasurer. Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries some of Britain's most notable engineers held the position of president, including Joseph Whitworth, Carl Wilhelm Siemens and Sir Harry Ricardo. It operated from premises in Birmingham until 1877 when it moved to London, taking up its present headquarters on Birdcage Walk in 1899.[9]



Birdcage Walk




No. 1 Birdcage Walk


Upon its move to London in 1877 the Institution rented premises at No. 10 Victoria Chambers, where it remained for 20 years. In 1895 the Institution bought a plot of land at Storey's Gate, on the eastern end of Birdcage Walk, for £9,500.[9] Architect Basil Slade looked to the newly-completed Admiralty buildings facing the site for inspiration. The building was designed in the Queen Anne, 'streaky bacon', style in red brick and Portland stone. Inside, there were several features that were state of the art for the time, including a telephone, a 54-inch fan in the lecture theatre for driving air into the building, an electric lift from the Otis Elevator Company, and a Synchronome master-clock, which controlled all house timepieces. In 1933 architect James Miller, who also designed the neighbouring Institution of Civil Engineers, remodelled the building, expanding the library and introducing electric lighting.


The building would go on to host the first public presentation of Frank Whittle's jet engine in 1945.[10] In 1943 it became the venue for the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers' planning of Operation Overlord and the invasion of Normandy.[9]


Today No. 1 Birdcage Walk hosts events, lectures, seminars and meetings in 17 conference and meeting rooms named after notable former members of the Institution, such as Whittle, Stephenson and Charles Parsons.



Membership grades and post-nominals


The following are membership grades with post-nominals :



  • Affiliate: (no post-nominal) The grade for students, apprentices and those interested in or involved in mechanical engineering who do not meet the requirements for the following grades.


  • AMIMechE: Associate Member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers: this is the grade for graduates (of acceptable degrees or equivalents in engineering, mathematics or science)


  • MIMechE: Member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. For those who meet the educational and professional requirements for registration as a Chartered Mechanical Engineer (CEng, MIMechE) and also as a Chartered Engineer (CEng) or Incorporated Engineer (IEng) or Engineering Technician (EngTech) in mechanical engineering.


  • FIMechE: Fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. This is the highest class of elected membership, and is awarded to individuals who have demonstrated exceptional commitment to and innovation in mechanical engineering.


Awards


The James Watt International Medal is an award for excellence in engineering established in 1937 by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. It is named after Scottish engineer James Watt (1736-1819) who developed the Watt steam engine in 1781, which was fundamental to the changes brought by the Industrial Revolution in both his native Great Britain and the rest of the world.


The Engineering Heritage Awards were created in 1984 to help recognise and promote the value of artefacts, locations, collections and landmarks of significant engineering importance.


Along with The Manufacturer, the Institution also runs The Manufacturer MX Awards,[11] and Formula Student, the world's largest student motorsport event.



Presidents




Annual dinner of the Institution in the carriage works of the Midland Railway at Derby in 1898. Samuel Johnson, the railway's Chief Mechanical Engineer, was the president.


As of 2018[update], there have been 133 presidents of the Institution, who since 1922 have been elected annually for one year. The first president was George Stephenson, followed by his son Robert. Joseph Whitworth, John Penn and William Armstrong are the only presidents to have served two terms.


Pamela Liversidge in 1997 became the first female president; Professor Isobel Pollock became the second in 2012 and Carolyn Griffiths became the third in 2017.



List of presidents




Pamela Liversidge, first female president (pictured in 2014)








































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































No
Years
Name
Sphere of influence
1
1847–1848

George Stephenson
railway engineer
2
1849–1853

Robert Stephenson
railway engineer, MP
3
1854–1855

William Fairbairn
manufacturer, trader, ironmaster, bridge, mill wheels, ships, later made baronet.
4
1856–1857

Joseph Whitworth (First term)
pioneer of machine tools, precision engineering
5
1858–1859

John Penn (First term)
Marine Steam engines
6
1860

James Kennedy
Marine engines and locomotives
7
1861–1862

William George Armstrong (First term)
Industrialist and inventor, primarily of armaments. Pioneer of domestic electricity
8
1863–1865

Robert Napier
Ship building and Marine engines
4
1865–1866

Joseph Whitworth (Second term)
pioneer of machine tools, precision engineering
5
1866–1868

John Penn (Second term)
Marine Steam Engines
7
1868–1869

William George Armstrong (Second term)
Industrialist and inventor, primarily of armaments. Pioneer of domestic electricity
9
1870–1871

John Ramsbottom
railway engineer
10
1872–1873
Sir William Siemens
Metallurgist and electrical engineer
11
1874–1875
Sir Frederick Joseph Bramwell
Steam engines and boilers
12
1876–1877

Thomas Hawksley
water and gas engineer
13
1878–1879

John Robinson
Steam Engines
14
1880–1881

Edward Alfred Cowper
Metallurgist, inventor of Cowper pot
15
1882–1883

Percy G. B. Westmacott
Hydraulic machinery
16
1884
Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell
Iron master
17
1885–1886

Jeremiah Head
Steam powered agricultural machinery
18
1887–1888

Edward Hamer Carbutt
Iron and steel making
19
1889

Charles Cochrane
Iron and steel making
20
1890–1891

Joseph Tomlinson
Locomotive Superintendent
21
1892–1893
Sir William Anderson
Bridges and factories
22
1894–1895
Prof. Alexander Blackie William Kennedy
Professor of engineering, University College London
23
1896–1897

Edward Windsor Richards
Iron master
24
1898

Samuel W. Johnson

Chief Mechanical Engineer, Midland Railway
25
1899–1900
Sir William Henry White
Naval architect
26
1901–1902

William Henry Maw
Editor, Engineering
27
1903–1904

Joseph Hartley Wicksteed
Testing machines and machine tools
28
1905–1906

Edward Pritchard Martin
Iron and steel making
29
1907–1908

Tom Hurry Riches
Chief engineer, Taff Vale Railway
30
1909–1910
Sir John Audley Frederick Aspinall

Chief Mechanical Engineer, Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
31
1911–1912

Edward B. Ellington
Hydraulic machinery
32
1913–1914
Sir Hay Frederick Donaldson
Royal Ordnance
33
1915–1916

William Cawthorne Unwin
oil engine research
34
1917–1918

Michael Longridge
Chief Engineer
35
1919

Edward Hopkinson
Electric Traction. Died during year of office
36
1920–1921
Cpt Matthew Henry Phineas Riall Sankey
Military engineering, oil engines and wireless telegraphy
37
1922
Dr Henry Selby Hele-Shaw
Prof. Mechanical Engineering at Liverpool University
38
1923
Sir John Dewrance
Inventor
39
1924

William Henry Patchell
Electricity supply
40
1925
Sir Vincent Raven

Chief Mechanical Engineer, North Eastern Railway
41
1926
Sir William Reavell
Compressor manufacturer
42
1927

Sir Henry Fowler

Chief Mechanical Engineer, Midland Railway and London Midland and Scottish Railway
43
1928

Richard William Allen
Pumps and Marine equipment
44
1929

Daniel Adamson
Gears, cranes and cutting tools
45
1930

Loughnan St Lawrence Pendred
Editor of The Engineer
46
1931

Edwin Kitson Clark
Locomotive Engineer
47
1932

William Taylor
Lens Manufacturing
48
1933

Alan Ernest Leofric Chorlton
Pumps and Diesel engines, MP
49
1934

Charles Day
Steam and diesel engines
50
1935
Major-General Alexander Elliott Davidson
Mechanised military transport
51
1936
Sir Nigel Gresley

Chief Mechanical Engineer, London and North Eastern Railway
52
1937
Sir John Edward Thornycroft
Ship building and motor vehicle design
53
1938

David E Roberts
Iron and steel manufacture
54
1939

E. Bruce Ball
Motor Vehicles and hydraulic valves
55
1940

Asa Binns
Engineer
56
1941
Sir William Stanier

Chief Mechanical Engineer, London, Midland and Scottish Railway
57
1942
Col Stephen Joseph Thompson
Boilers
58
1943

Frederick Charles Lea
Engineering Professor at Birmingham and Sheffield Universities
59
1944
Sir Harry Ralph Ricardo
Automotive engineer. Founder, Ricardo Consulting
60
1945

Andrew Robertson
Prof. Mechanical engineering at Bristol University
61
1946

Oliver Vaughan Snell Bulleid

Chief Mechanical Engineer, Southern Railway
62
1947

Lord Dudley Gordon
Refrigeration engineering
63
1948

E. William Gregson
Marine engines
64
1949

Herbert John Gough
Metal Fatigue, Engineering Research
65
1950

Stanley Fabes Dorey
Chief Engineer Surveyor
66
1951

Arthur Clifford Hartley
Chief engineer, Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. Inventor, Pluto and Fido
67
1952
Sir David Randall Pye

Air Ministry research engineer
68
1953

Alfred Roebuck
Engineering metallurgy
69
1954

Richard William Bailey
High temperature steel and materials research
70
1955

Percy Lewis Jones
Marine engines and ship building
71
1956

Thomas Arkle Crowe
Marine Engines
72
1957

George Nelson
Chairman English Electric
73
1958

Air Marshal Sir Robert Owen Jones
Aircraft Engineer
74
1959

Herbert Desmond Carter
Diesel Engines
75
1960
Sir Owen Alfred Saunders
Prof. Mechanical Engineering Imperial College
76
1961
Sir Charles Hague
Chairman, Babcock & Wilcox
77
1962

John Hereward Pitchford
Internal Combustion engines
78
1963

Roland Curling Bond
Chief Mechanical Engineer, British Railways[12]
79
1964
Vice-Admiral Sir Frank Mason
Engineer in chief, Royal Navy
80
1965

Harold Norman Gwynne Allen
Power Transmission
81
1966

Lord Hinton of Bankside
Pioneer of nuclear power
82
1967

Hugh Graham Conway
Aero-engines and gas turbines
83
1968
Sir Arnold Lewis George Lindley
Chairman of GEC
84
1969

Donald Frederick Galloway
Manufacturing and machine tool engineer
85
1970

John Lamb Murray Morrison
Prof. Mechanical engineering Bristol University
86
1971

Robert Lang Lickley
Aircraft engineer
87
1972

Lord Stokes
Chief executive, British Leyland
88
1973
Sir John William Atwell
Steel industry and pump manufacture
89
1974
Sir St John de Hold Elstub
Metals
90
1975

Paul Thomas Fletcher
Process plan and nuclear power plant
91
1976

Ewen McEwen
Chief engineer, Lucas
92
1977
Sir Hugh Ford
Professor of mechanical engineering, Imperial College London
93
1978

Diarmuid Downs
Internal combustion engines
94
1979

James Gordon Dawson
Chief Engineer, Shell
95
1980

Bryan Hildrew
Managing Director, Lloyd's Register of Shipping
96
1981

Francis David Penny
Director, National Engineering Laboratory
97
1982

Victor John Osola/Vaino Junani Osola
Process engineer, safety glass
98
1983

George Fritz Werner Adler
Research Director, British Hydromechanical Research Association
99
1984

Waheeb Rizk
Gas turbines at GEC
100
1985
Sir Philip Foreman
Aerospace engineer
101
1986
Sir Bernard Crossland
Prof. Mechanical Engineering, Queen's University Belfast
102
1987

Oscar Roith
Chief Engineer, Department of Industry
103
1988

Cecil Charles John French
Internal combustion engines
104
1989

Roy Ernest James Roberts
Director, GKN
105
1990

Michael John Neale

Tribology
106
1991

Duncan Dowson
Prof of Fluid Mechanics, Leeds University
107
1992

Tom D. Patten
Offshore engineering
108
1993

Anthony Albert Denton
Offshore engineering
109
1994

Brian Hamilton Kent
Design and engineering management
110
1995

Frank Christopher Price
Technical director
111
1996

Robert William Ernest Shannon
Inspection engineering
112
1997

Pamela Liversidge
Powder metallurgy
113
1998

John Spence

114
1999

James McKnight

115
2000

Denis E. Filer

116
2001

Tony Roche

117
2002

John McDougall
MD of WS Atkins
117
2003

Chris Taylor

Tribology
119
2004

William Edgar[13]
Offshore engineering
120
2005

Andrew Ives[14]
Automobile engine electronics
121
2006

W. Alec Osborn MBE

122
2007

John Baxter

nuclear engineer
123
2008
William M. Banks
Composite materials. Professor, University of Strathclyde
124
2009
Keith Millard

125
2010
John Wood[15]Automotive
126
2011
Roderick Smith
Rail engineer

127
2012

Isobel Pollock[16]
Engineering management

128
2013
Patrick Kniveton[17]Nuclear Engineering - Rolls Royce
129
2014
Group Captain Mark Hunt OBE
RAF
130
2015
Professor Richard Folkson
Chief Engineer of Ford of Europe, lecturer at University of Hertfordshire
131
2016
Jon Hilton

Kinetic energy recovery system pioneer, Deputy Chairman of Torotrak PLC
132
2017

Carolyn Griffiths
Railway and Railway Accident Investigation
133
2018†
Geoff Baker

† Baker resigned in June 2018.[18]



Engineering Committees


The Institution of Mechanical Engineers has a number of committees that work to promote and develop thought leadership in different industry sectors. The Institution has 8 divisions: - Aerospace, Automobile, Biomedical Engineering Association, Construction & Building Services, Manufacturing Industries, Power Industries, Process Industries and Railway.[19]


Biomedical Engineering Association (BmEA) aims to bring together key workers from both medicine and engineering to discuss the latest advances and issues, to enable networking among different industry leaders, and to promote the field of Medical Engineering, also known as Bioengineering or Biomedical Engineering, to government, healthcare professionals and the wider public. This committee offers:


  • seminars, lectures and conferences every year;

  • the Journal of Engineering in Medicine;[20]

  • the annual Student Project Competition.

The Railway Division was formed in 1969 when the Institution of Locomotive Engineers amalgamated with IMechE.[21]



See also


  • Engineering

  • James Watt International Medal

  • Chartered Engineer

  • Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers


References






  1. ^ ab Awdry 1981


  2. ^ Pullin 1997, p. 2


  3. ^ Watson 1988, pp. 33-34


  4. ^ Cragg 1997, p. 194; Watson 1988, pp. 33-34


  5. ^ ab Pullin 1997, p. 3


  6. ^ Pullin 1997, p. 4


  7. ^ "Beyer proposing Stephen as President". 


  8. ^ "Grace's Guide; Charles Beyer Obituary 1887". 


  9. ^ abc [1]


  10. ^ [2]


  11. ^ The Manufacturer MX Awards


  12. ^ Bond R.C. "A Lifetime With Locomotives", Goose & Son 1980


  13. ^ "Biography of William Edgar CBE" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-03-30. 


  14. ^ "Biography of Andrew P Ives" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-05-13. 


  15. ^ "Presidential addresses". Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Retrieved 13 January 2011. 


  16. ^ IMechE Professor Isobel A Pollock 127th President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers


  17. ^ IMechE Professor Patrick Kniveton 128th President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers


  18. ^ "Message from the Trustee Board". www.imeche.org. Retrieved 2018-08-02. 


  19. ^ IMechE industries page


  20. ^ http://pih.sagepub.com/


  21. ^ IMechE railway page



Footnotes




  1. ^ Pullin 1997, p. 2 quotes a leaflet from the opening of Birdcage Walk in 1899




Sources



  • Pullin, John (1997). Progress through Mechanical Engineering. Quiller Press. ISBN 1-899163-28-X. 


  • Cragg, Roger (1997). Civil Engineering Heritage: Wales and West Central England: Wales and West Central England, 2nd Edition. Thomas Telford. ISBN 0-7277-2576-9. 


  • Watson, Garth (1988). The civils: the story of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Thomas Telford Limited. ISBN 978-0727703927. 


  • Awdry, Rev W (1981). "Bromsgrove and the Lickey Incline: the railway revolution". In Foster, John. Bygone Bromsgrove: an illustrated story of the town in days gone by. Bromsgrove Society. ISBN 9780950947143. OL 19606374M. 


External links


  • IMechE Official website

  • Professional Engineering magazine website








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