From the Proceedings of the New York Meeting of Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute - The Presentation of the Bessemer Medal Address of Sir James Kitson and Reply of Hon. Abram S. Hewitt

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 370 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1891
Abstract
I HAVE now the duty—the very pleasant duty—to perform, of presenting to the Hon. Abram S. Hewitt the Bessemer gold medal for distinguished services to the iron and steel trade. When this matter was brought under consideration in London it was well known that, as Mr. Hewitt would be the first to acknowledge, there is more than one man in America upon whom we would gladly have cm ferred this distinction, and to whom this merit might be justly at tributed ; but Mr. Hewitt has been long known to our distinguished members on the other side of the Atlantic as one of the most active minds in the investigation of new methods of manufacture, and one of the most enterprising metallurgists on this side of the Atlantic. Well, gentlemen, we proposed to Mr. Hewitt that he should receive this gold medal, but I think it is quite right, and is his due, that I should state that he at once declined to receive it; and he declined in a manner which rendered it impossible to any one but very per sistent friends and very obstinate Englishmen to refuse. When we heard that our American friends had conferred once more upon Mr. Hewitt the distinction of President of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, and particularly with reference to our contem plated visit, and when we heard that he had been elected unani mously to that position, we felt that we had received the stamp of approval from this side. Gentlemen, as I said before, Mr. Hewitt has long been known to many of us in England as an advocate of scientific education. A report which he made of the metallurgical products at the Paris Exposition in 1867 was one of the matters which drew very clearly and distinctly the attention of the English iron and steel trade to the necessity of further improvement in our technical education as to iron and steel; and it was one of those beginnings which led ultimately to the foundation of the Iron and Steel Institute. The development of the ideas which 'he there investigated undoubtedly led
Citation
APA:
(1891) From the Proceedings of the New York Meeting of Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute - The Presentation of the Bessemer Medal Address of Sir James Kitson and Reply of Hon. Abram S. HewittMLA: From the Proceedings of the New York Meeting of Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute - The Presentation of the Bessemer Medal Address of Sir James Kitson and Reply of Hon. Abram S. Hewitt. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1891.