Gordon Rawcliffe

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Gordon Hindle Rawcliffe

electrical engineer
and academic.

Life

Gordon Hindle Rawcliffe, whose father was an

St Edmund's School, Canterbury before matriculating at Keble College, Oxford to study mathematics. After his first-year examinations, he switched to engineering, under Richard V. Southwell, and obtained a first-class degree in 1932. He worked for the next five years for Metropolitan-Vickers in Manchester, initially as an apprentice and then as a design engineer. In 1937, more interested in the science of engineering than production methods, he moved to the University of Liverpool as lecturer in electrical engineering; four years later, he moved again, to the University of Aberdeen, as lecturer in charge of electrical engineering and departmental head of Robert Gordon's Technical College (now Robert Gordon University). In 1944, the University of Bristol appointed him Professor of Electrical Engineering, a post that he held for the next 31 years. After retiring in 1975, he died in Bristol of a heart attack on 3 September 1979, brought on by the asthma that affected his health throughout his life.[1]

Work

From 1955 onwards, Rawcliffe worked on

Honorary Fellow of Keble College, Oxford in 1976, and received honorary degrees from the universities of Loughborough and Bath.[1]

References