David B. Adamson
David Beveridge Adamson was a farm implement manufacturer and inventor in Adelaide, South Australia.
History
Adamson was born at Scaw Mill, Hawick, Roxburghshire, Scotland, one of seven children of wheelwright James Adamson and Elizabeth May Adamson, née Beveridge, who arrived in South Australia in September 1839 aboard Recovery from London. Their father founded a workshop and farm equipment factory on Hanson Street, Adelaide. Eventually the workshops, associated buildings and several houses occupied much of Town Acres 417 and 444 between Hanson Street and Bews Street.Their principal products were wheat harvesters and strippers based on John Ridley's patent, and with a reputation for trouble-free operation prospered, and became Adamson Brothers around 1855. They opened branches at Kapunda in 1859 Auburn in 1865 and Laura in 1874.
Adamson had attended school at Dunfermline, Scotland, but having an insatiable thirst for knowledge was largely self-educated. Around 1882 the brothers were able to retire from business, and Adamson was able to devote his inventive mind and energies to his passion for science and invention. Among his creations were:
- Various pieces of furniture
- A harmonium
- A violin, claimed in 1876 to have been the first made in the colony
- An orrery, built around 1870, later held by the Royal Astronomical Society of South Australia
- A Foucault gyroscope
- A Gregorian telescope, and induced his good friend A. W. Dobbie to build one
- A Newtonian telescope
He was in 1867 elected a fellow of the Philosophical Society Royal Society of South Australia in 1867 and a member of its council from 1879. He published three papers in that society's Transactions and Proceedings.
He was one of the most ingenious men whom I ever met. The telescope which forms so prominent a feature in the arrangements of his house in Wakefield-street is really one of the most remarkable specimens of the outcome of patience and genius which Adelaide contains.
He used the telescope to good effect during the partial eclipse of the Sun on 12 December 1890. He experimented for a few days prior to the event to get the clearest picture without frying the emulsion on the glass slide, and found he got excellent results by reducing the aperture of the telescope considerably and removing the silver coating from the speculum so only a small percentage of the sun's rays was reflected from the glass surface.
Other interests
He was, as were his brothers, a strong supporter of the Church, a founding member of Chalmers Church and Stow Memorial Church of which he was a deacon and Sunday-school superintendent.He was a prominent supporter of the Young Men's Christian Association, the Chamber of Manufactures and the Destitute Board.
Last days and death
In his last years, Adamson suffered from asthma, for which he was treated by Dr Way, and died following a stroke or from rheumatic heart disease. His remains were buried at the West Terrace Cemetery.It was well that Mr Adamson died as he did—quietly and peacefully without protracted illness. Had he lived after the seizure to which he succumbed he would have been a chronic invalid, and that would have seemed intolerable even to a philosopher like him
Family
Adamson married Emma Golding La Vence on 6 November 1849 at Tenterden Cottage, Adelaide. Their fifteen children include:- James Beveridge Adamson married Barbara Anderson on 5 December 1872 and Mary Ann Ames on 6 August 1880
- Sarah Kidd Adamson
- Elizabeth Beveridge Adamson married Cornelius Edward Hall on 23 September 1875
- Emma Adamson married Henry Savage on 18 May 1881
- Magdalene Adamson married Thomas James Ames Ames on 5 July 1883
- David Beveridge Adamson married Eliza Gertrude Greenwood on 18 October 1883, died in Perth, Western Australia
- Robert Beveridge Adamson married Emma "Emmie" Stanford on 1 November 1892; died in Temora, New South Wales. He was a noted photographer.
- Charles Francis Adamson married Mary Dorothea Sarah Ellen Krischock on 30 November 1897
- William Steele Adamson married Elizabeth Caroline Sabine on 28 January 1902 died in Parkside, South Australia
- Lilian Adamson married William Penry Jones on 28 August 1895
- Albert Stanley Adamson married Emily Edith Arbon on 26 August 1898
- Margaret Thomson Adamson married Percival Harold Price on 29 October 1901
- Florence May Adamson married Richard Alexander Duncan on 7 December 1899
See also James Hazel Adamson for more on his brothers.