Bill Hamilton (engineer) explained

Sir William Hamilton
Birth Name:Charles William Feilden Hamilton
Birth Date:26 July 1899
Birth Place:Ashwick Station, Fairlie, New Zealand
Death Place:Fairlie, New Zealand
Education:Waihi Preparatory School
Christ's College
Other Names:Bill Hamilton
Parents:William Feilden Hamilton
Cora Blakeney (née Cannon)

Sir Charles William Feilden Hamilton (26 July 1899 – 30 March 1978) was a New Zealand engineer who developed the modern jetboat, and founded the water jet manufacturing company, CWF Hamilton Ltd.

Hamilton never claimed to have invented the jet boat. He once said "I do not claim to have invented marine jet propulsion. The honour belongs to a gentleman named Archimedes, who lived some years ago." What he did was refine the design enough to produce the first useful modern jet boat.

Early life

Hamilton was born at Ashwick Station near Fairlie, New Zealand.

Hamilton survived an airplane accident returning to Rongotai Airport (Wellington) in poor conditions on 19 February 1936. The collision with the anemometer mast took the starboard wing off the fastest 'plane in the country, the Miles Falcon Six he was travelling in, and pilot Malcolm "Mac" McGregor died in hospital.[1] [2]

At the age of 21 he bought the 'Irishman Creek' sheep station in South Canterbury. After a trip to England became fascinated with motor cars and raced a Bentley. He decided to develop his own heavy machinery. He built a workshop, developed an excavator with an earth scoop and built a dam to supply water for a hydroelectric plant to supply power for domestic use and for his engineering projects, and started a manufacturing business.[3]

Ski tows

In 1947 tourism pioneer Harry Wigley of Mount Cook airline fame commissioned him to design and build the first tow for the Coronet Peak Ski Field near Queenstown New Zealand's first commercial skifield.[4] In 1949 he completed a similar tow at Mount Ruapehu.[5] Within a few years he had perfected the Hamilton Model B design that is still in use for nutcracker ski tows in New Zealand and Australia.[6]

Christchurch

The main manufacturing business, which had started in the workshop at Irishman Creek in 1939, moved to Christchurch in 1948. From there the company supplied heavy machinery, in particular to the Waitaki River hydroelectric projects.[7]

Jet boats

See main article: jetboat. In the 1950s Hamilton set out to try to build a boat that could navigate the shallow fast flowing rivers where he lived. The rivers were too shallow for propeller driven boats to navigate as the propeller would hit the river bottom.

He investigated the American Hanley Hydro-Jet, a model which drew in water and fired it out through a steerable nozzle underneath the boat. Even when further adapted it did not work well. An employee suggested moving the nozzle to just above the waterline.

When he took one of his early demonstration jet boats to the United States, the media scoffed when he said he planned to take it up the Colorado River, but in 1960 three Hamilton jet boats, the Kiwi, Wee Red and Dock, became the first and only boats to travel up through the Grand Canyon. The boats also went down river through the Grand Canyon to cache petrol just prior to the uprun. The Grand Canyon trip planning, logistics for 2,500 gallons of fuel, and fuel placement was coordinated by famous Grand Canyon river runner Otis "Dock" Marston.[8]

CWF Hamilton & Co Ltd

The engineering company Hamilton founded, CWF Hamilton & Co Ltd, is now the holding company for two companies, Hamilton Jet and Hamilton Marine, that are focused on the production of waterjet propulsion systems. The company has divested itself of its other engineering activities.[9]

Honours and awards

In the 1961 New Year Honours, Hamilton was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for services to engineering. In the 1974 Queen's Birthday Honours, he was appointed a Knight Bachelor, for services to manufacturing.

In 2004, Hamilton was posthumously inducted into the New Zealand Business Hall of Fame.[10]

Books

Notes and References

  1. https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19360220.2.117.1 The Evening Post
  2. Book: King, John. Aviation Accidents and Disasters. Grantham House. Wellington. 1995. New Zealand Tragedies. 145–147. 1-86934-042-6.
  3. http://www.intrepidmagazine.co.nz/articles/4/billhamilton/ "The Shed at Irishman's Creek"
  4. http://www.historic.org.nz/en/Publications/HeritageNZMagazine/HeritageNz2004/HNZ04-SkiIndustry.aspx "Ski Industry Based on Pioneer Spirit"
  5. http://www.mtruapehu.com/winter/ski-runners/ "Ski runners on Mt Ruapehu"
  6. https://www.australianmountains.com/australianskilifts/#2 "Australian ski lift directory: 2.3 Surface lifts"
  7. http://www.nzine.co.nz/features/hamilton.html "Business Of The Month"
  8. Martin, Thomas C., (2012). "Big Water Little Boats: Moulty Fulmer and the First Grand Canyon Dory on the Last of the Wild Colorado River". Flagstaff, Arizona: Vishnu Temple Press, pg. 189,
  9. Web site: 75 years of innovation . Hamilton Jet . 16 July 2018.
  10. Web site: Past laureates . Business Hall of Fame . 19 February 2023.