Jonas Patrik Ljungström | |
Birth Date: | 12 March 1827 |
Nationality: | Swedish |
Family: | Ljungström |
Father: | Johan Patrik Ljungström |
Mother: | Maria Christina (née Spaak) |
Spouse: | Amalia Bernhardina (née Falck) |
Children: | 8, including Georg Ljungström, Oscar Ljungström, Birger Ljungström, Fredrik Ljungström |
Relatives: | Peter Spaak (great-grandfather), Abraham Hülphers the Elder (third great-grandfather), (great-grandfather), (uncle) |
Occupation: | Cartographer, geodesist, teacher |
Institutions: | Royal Institute of Technology |
Jonas Patrik Ljungström (12 March 1827 - 22 October 1898) was a Swedish cartographer, geodesist, and teacher at the Royal Institute of Technology.[1]
Jonas Patrik Ljungström was born 12 March 1827 in Uddevalla as the son of jeweler Johan Patrik Ljungström, and Maria Christina (née Spaak). His great grandfather was the Protestant reformer Peter Spaak, and his third great-grandfather early industrialist Abraham Hülphers the Elder. He married Amalia (née Falck), and their issue included Georg Ljungström, Oscar Ljungström, Birger Ljungström, and Fredrik Ljungström.
After examination in Stockholm in 1849, Ljungström served as land surveyor for the Gothenburg and Bohus County from 1864, and as cartographer at the governmental agency for cartography in Stockholm 1873–1888. Parallel to this, he developed land survey and precision instruments at his own manufactory that cooperated with the early manufactory of L. M. Ericsson. Furthermore, he taught at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.
Ljungström's multiple technical innovations won prizes at the General Industrial Exposition of Stockholm (1866), the General Art and Industrial Exposition of Stockholm (1897), Exposition Universelle (1878), Exposition Universelle (1900), the Brussels Geographic Conference (1876), the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia (1876), and the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago (1893). While in Philadelphia in 1876 he met the Swedish physicist Salomon August Andrée who remained a friend of the family until his death, teaching Ljungström's sons Birger and Fredrik in physics.
The most successful of his inventions, the distance tube land surveying precision instrument, endured in professional use until the 1950s. Noted by John Ericsson (1803–1889) as "an innovative mind of extraordinary capability and extensive mechanical wit", Ljungström's works are represented by the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology,[2] as well as by regional cultural heritage museums.[3] [4]