John
Gorrie
1851.- In
the United States, John Gorrie, who had demonstrated his ice-making machine
based on compressed air expansion almost a year earlier, received a patent for
his invention. He is therefore considered the father of refrigeration and air
conditioning.
(October
3, 1803 – June 29, 1855) was a Nevisian-born American physician and scientist,
credited as the inventor of mechanical refrigeration.[1][2]
Born on
the Island of Nevis in the Leeward Islands of the West Indies to Scottish
parents on October 3, 1803, he spent his childhood in South Carolina. He
received his medical education at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of the
Western District of New York in Fairfield, New York.
In 1833,
he moved to Apalachicola, Florida, a port city on the Gulf coast. As well as
being resident physician at two hospitals, Gorrie was active in the community.
At various times he served as a council member, postmaster, president of the
Bank of Pensacola's Apalachicola Branch, Secretary of his Masonic Lodge, and
one of the founding vestrymen of Trinity Episcopal Church.
Gorrie
Monument in Apalachicola, Florida.
Gorrie's
medical research involved the study of tropical diseases, particularly yellow
fever. At the time the theory that bad air — mal-aria — caused diseases was a
prevalent hypothesis, and based on this theory, he urged draining the swamps
and the cooling of sickrooms.[3] For this he cooled rooms with ice in a basin
suspended from the ceiling. Cool air, being heavier, flowed down across the
patient and through an opening near the floor.
Experiments
with artificial cooling
Since it
was necessary to transport ice by boat from the northern lakes, Gorrie
experimented with making artificial ice.[2]
He first
mechanically produced ice in 1844.[4] After 1845, Gorrie gave up his medical
practice to pursue refrigeration products. By 1850 he was able to routinely
produce ice the size of bricks.[5] On May 6, 1851, Gorrie was granted Patent
No. 8080 for a machine to make ice. The original model of this machine and the
scientific articles he wrote are at the Smithsonian Institution. In 1835,
patents for "Apparatus and means for producing ice and in cooling
fluids" had been granted in England and Scotland to American-born inventor
Jacob Perkins, who became known as "the father of the refrigerator".
Impoverished, Gorrie sought to raise money to manufacture his machine, but the
venture failed when his partner died. Humiliated by criticism, financially
ruined, and his health broken, Gorrie died in seclusion on June 29, 1855. He is
buried in Magnolia Cemetery.[6][7]: 195
Another
version of Gorrie's "cooling system"[citation needed] was used when
President James A. Garfield was dying in 1881. Naval engineers built a box
filled with cloths that had been soaked in melted ice water. Then by allowing
hot air to blow on the cloths it decreased the room temperature by 20 degrees
Fahrenheit. The problem with this method was essentially the same problem
Gorrie had. It required an enormous amount of ice to keep the room cooled
continuously. Yet it was an important event in the history of air conditioning.
It proved that Gorrie had the right idea, but was unable to capitalize on
it.[8] The first practical refrigeration system in 1854, patented in 1855, was
built by James Harrison in Geelong, Australia.[9]
Monuments
and memorials
Schematic
of Gorrie's ice machine
In
Apalachicola, Gorrie Square is named in his honor. The square contains his
grave site, a monument, and the John Gorrie State Museum.
The John
Gorrie Bridge, across Apalachicola Bay, connects Apalachicola with Eastpoint.
In 1914,
the state of Florida gave a statue of Gorrie by sculptor C. Adrian Pillars to
the National Statuary Hall Collection.[2]
John
Gorrie Junior High School, now an apartment building named The John Gorrie, in
Jacksonville and John Gorrie Elementary School in Tampa is named in his honor.
John
Gorrie Dog Park at Riverside Park in Jacksonville, Florida opened in the summer
of 2016.
The World
War II Liberty Ship SS John Gorrie was named in his honor.
The John
Gorrie Award is awarded each year to a graduate of the University of Florida
College of Medicine believed to be the "best all-around student showing
promise of becoming a practitioner of the highest type."
With
affection,
Ruben
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