Collingwood Museum
Located at the corner of St. Paul and Highway 26, the Collingwood Museum is housed in The Station, Collingwood's heritage building, designed in the spirit of the 1873 rail station. Museum exhibits focus on the pre-history, history, growth and development of Collingwood and area, with particular emphasis on marine, shipping and rail transportation. Situated across from the Collingwood Shipyards, the Collingwood museum houses a substantial collection of all things related to transportation and settlement of Simcoe County along the shores of Georgian Bay. The museum houses a large collection of artifacts and information related to the Northern Navigation Company and the Grand Truck Railway. The Huron Institute, with information pertaining to the Petun Indians, is also found within the Collingwood museum.
For more information about this museum, visit
Lord Kelvin | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:02:43 1 Early life and work
00:02:52 1.1 Family
00:04:26 1.2 Youth
00:07:25 1.3 Cambridge
00:09:57 1.4 Thermodynamics
00:17:12 2 Transatlantic cable
00:17:22 2.1 Calculations on data rate
00:19:56 2.2 Scientist to engineer
00:22:42 2.3 Disaster and triumph
00:25:09 2.4 Later expeditions
00:26:57 3 Other contributions
00:27:07 3.1 Thomson and Tait: iTreatise on Natural Philosophy/i
00:27:55 3.2 Kelvin's vortex theory of the atom
00:29:01 3.3 Marine
00:32:10 3.4 Electrical standards
00:34:28 3.5 Age of the Earth: geology
00:39:12 4 Later life and death
00:42:39 5 Aftermath and legacy
00:42:49 5.1 Limits of classical physics
00:45:04 5.2 Pronouncements later proven to be false
00:48:40 5.3 Eponyms
00:48:55 5.4 Honours
00:52:17 5.5 Arms
00:52:25 6 See also
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Speaking Rate: 0.8934871531009556
Voice name: en-US-Wavenet-E
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
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William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin, (26 June 1824 – 17 December 1907) was an Irish-Scottish (of Ulster Scots heritage) mathematical physicist and engineer who was born in Belfast in 1824. At the University of Glasgow he did important work in the mathematical analysis of electricity and formulation of the first and second laws of thermodynamics, and did much to unify the emerging discipline of physics in its modern form. He worked closely with mathematics professor Hugh Blackburn in his work. He also had a career as an electric telegraph engineer and inventor, which propelled him into the public eye and ensured his wealth, fame and honour. For his work on the transatlantic telegraph project he was knighted in 1866 by Queen Victoria, becoming Sir William Thomson. He had extensive maritime interests and was most noted for his work on the mariner's compass, which previously had limited reliability.
Absolute temperatures are stated in units of kelvin in his honour. While the existence of a lower limit to temperature (absolute zero) was known prior to his work, Kelvin is known for determining its correct value as approximately −273.15 degree Celsius or −459.67 degree Fahrenheit.
He was ennobled in 1892 in recognition of his achievements in thermodynamics, and of his opposition to Irish Home Rule, becoming Baron Kelvin, of Largs in the County of Ayr. He was the first British scientist to be elevated to the House of Lords. The title refers to the River Kelvin, which flows near his laboratory at the University of Glasgow. His home was the red sandstone mansion Netherhall, in Largs. Despite offers of elevated posts from several world-renowned universities, Kelvin refused to leave Glasgow, remaining professor of Natural Philosophy for over 50 years, until his eventual retirement from that post. The Hunterian Museum at the University of Glasgow has a permanent exhibition on the work of Kelvin including many of his original papers, instruments, and other artifacts, such as his smoking pipe.
Active in industrial research and development, he was recruited around 1899 by George Eastman to serve as vice-chairman of the board of the British company Kodak Limited, affiliated with Eastman Kodak.
ThyssenDover Impulse Hydraulic Elevator @ 37 Broadway, North Haven, CT
Installed 2001. Weird that the lantern is so high up.