The first book to portray the birth of naval architecture as an integral part of the Scientific Revolution, examining its development and application across the major shipbuilding nations of Europe.
Larrie D. Ferreiro FRHistS received his PhD in the History of Science and Technology from Imperial College London.
He teaches history and engineering at George Mason University in Virginia and the Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He has served for over forty years in the US Navy, US Coast Guard and Department of Defense, and was an exchange engineer in the French Navy.
He is the author of Churchill's American Arsenal: he Partnership Behind the Innovations that Won World War Two; Brothers at Arms: American Independence and the Men of France and Spain Who Saved It; Measure of the Earth: The Enlightenment Expedition That Reshaped Our World; and Ships and Science: The Birth of Naval Architecture in the Scientific Revolution, 1600–1800.
Excellent book on the history of (one type of) engineering, but it suffers from/is strengthened by its being neither a technical treatise nor a layman's popularization. I am not an engineer, so I had to skim chunks of the books that used calculus to determine some of the properties described in the book. However, I found it fascinating how the science developed, the personalities involved, and WHO was involved. Many names I knew from other fields helped to create the science of naval architecture including Euler, Bernoulli, and Huygens, as well as the not unexpected Archimedes and Newton. Other names like Nelson, Brunel, Napoleon, Franklin, and the Vasa popped up and helped to place what I was learning into context. Of course I now know something about Pierre Bouguer, Jorge Juan y Santacilia, and the Geodesic Mission to Peru in the 1730s. Finally, something that was not focused on naval architecture, but did have a large effect was the closing of the French Academy of Sciences under the French Revolution. The book reminds us the great chemist Antoine de Lavoisier, discoverer of of oxygen, was caught up in the purge and was executed in 1794 accompanied by (probably apocryphal) statement, "The Revolution has no need of scholars." Eighteen months later he was exonerated, and his personal effects returned with a note, "To the widow of Lavoisier, who was falsely convicted". But the damage was done, let this be a lesson to us all.