Alan Pollard: Difference between revisions
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'''Alan Faraday Campbell Pollard''' (1877-1948) was a British professor of optics and advocate of documentation. | '''Alan Faraday Campbell Pollard''' (1877-1948) was a British professor of optics and advocate of documentation. | ||
After study at the London University Pollard became a munitions specialist. he joined Nobels Explosives Ltd in Croydon and was chief physicist. After army service in the First World War he was appointed sub-director of the Instrument Section of the Ministry of Munitions in 1918 and captain in the Royal Air Force. He was then appointed to the chair in instrument design in the Technical Optics Department of the Imperial College until he retired and became professor emeritus. | After study at the London University Pollard became a munitions specialist. he joined Nobels Explosives Ltd in Croydon and was chief physicist. After army service in the First World War he was appointed sub-director of the Instrument Section of the Ministry of Munitions in 1918 and captain in the Royal Air Force. He was then appointed to the chair in instrument design in the Technical Optics Department of the Imperial College until he retired and became professor emeritus. | ||
He invented or developed a wide range of instruments and appliances and received a DSc (Engineering) degree. | He invented or developed a wide range of instruments and appliances and received a DSc (Engineering) degree in 1943. | ||
Pollard died August 15, 1948 at Thames Ditton. | Pollard died August 15, 1948 at Thames Ditton. | ||
Revision as of 15:16, 26 January 2025
Alan Pollard (1877-1948) was a British scientist and documentalist.
Not to be confused with Alfred William Pollard (1859–1944), English bibliographer,
Alan Faraday Campbell Pollard (1877-1948) was a British professor of optics and advocate of documentation. After study at the London University Pollard became a munitions specialist. he joined Nobels Explosives Ltd in Croydon and was chief physicist. After army service in the First World War he was appointed sub-director of the Instrument Section of the Ministry of Munitions in 1918 and captain in the Royal Air Force. He was then appointed to the chair in instrument design in the Technical Optics Department of the Imperial College until he retired and became professor emeritus. He invented or developed a wide range of instruments and appliances and received a DSc (Engineering) degree in 1943. Pollard died August 15, 1948 at Thames Ditton.
Contributions
Famous for his neatness, Pollard was an active advocate of systematic documentation. He promoted the Universal Decimal Classification and helpd develop the class numbers for optics. Pollard was the first President of the British Society for International Bibliography ((BSIB), co-founded with S. C. Bradford, from 1927-1945. BSIB was the British affiliate of the FID. He was also very active in the International Institute for Bibliography (later FID and was Predident 1927-1928.
Publications
- "The World List of Scientific Periodicals." Aslib proceedings 1 (1924) 78--79 [1]
- The decimal bibliographical classification of the Institut international de bibliographie, partly translated for the formation and use of a universal bibliographical repertory concerning optics, light, and cognate subjects. Cambridge, 1926. "Abridged translation of the classification tables contained in the Manuel du répertoire bibliographique universel ... intended to serve as a guide to the Decimal index of the Transactions of the Optical society."
- The kinematical design of couplings in instrument mechanisms. London: Hilger, 1929. Reprinted London: Hilger & Watts, 1951.
Further reading
- Martin, L. C. "Prof. Alan F. C. Pollard." Nature 162, no. 4122 (Oct. 30, 1948): 686–687. Obituary. [2]
- "Professor A. F.C. Pollard", Journal of Documentation, Vol. 4 No. 2, (March 1948): 63-66.
- [Professor Alan Faraday Campbell Pollard (1877-1948)] Engineering (July-Dec 1948): 188. Obituary.
- Rayward, W. B. The universe of information: The work of Paul Otlet for documentation and international organisation. Moscow: FID. (FID Publ. 520)
Papers
Science Museum Group, London. British Society for International Bibliography [3] [4]