Alfred Nobel
Alfred Nobel was born in Stockholm, Sweden on October 21, 1833.(Encarta)
His father Immanuel Nobel was an engineer and inventor who built bridges
and buildings in Stockholm. In connection with his construction work
Immanuel Nobel also experimented with different techniques of blasting
rock. Alfred's mother, Andrietta Ahlsell came from a wealthy family. Due
to misfortunes in the construction work caused by the loss of some
barges of building material, Immanuel Nobel was forced into bankruptcy
the same year Alfred Nobel was born.
In 1837, Immanuel Nobel left
Stockholm and his family to start a new career in Finland and in Russia.
To support the family, Andrietta Nobel started a grocery store which
provided a modest income. Meanwhile Immanuel Nobel was successful in his
new enterprise in St. Petersburg, Russia. He started a mechanical
workshop which provided equipment for the Russian army and he also
convinced the Tsar and his generals that naval mines could be used to
block enemy naval ships from threatening the city. The naval mines
designed by Immanuel Nobel were simple devices consisting of submerged
wooden casks filled with gun powder. Anchored below the surface of the
Gulf of Finland they effectively deterred the British Royal Navy from
moving into firing range of St. Petersburg during the Crimean war
(1853-1856).
Immanuel Nobel was also a pioneer in arms manufacture and in designing
steam engines. Successful in his industrial and business ventures,
Immanuel Nobel was able, in 1842, to bring his family to St. Petersburg.
There, his sons were given a first class education by private teachers.
The training included natural sciences, languages and literature. By the
age of 17, Alfred Nobel was fluent in Swedish, Russian, French, English
and German. His primary interests were in English literature and poetry
as well as in chemistry and physics. Alfred's father, who wanted his
sons to join his enterprise as engineers, disliked Alfred's interest in
poetry and found his son rather introverted. In order to widen Alfred's
horizons his father sent him abroad for further training in chemical
engineering. During a two year period, Alfred Nobel visited Sweden,
Germany, France and the United States.(Schuck p. 113) In Paris, the city
he came to like best, he worked in the private laboratory of Professor
T.J. Pelouze, a famous chemist. There he met the young Italian chemist
Ascanio Sobrero who, three years earlier, had invented nitroglycerin, a
highly explosive liquid. Nitroglycerin was produced by mixing glycerin
with sulfuric and nitric acid. It was considered too dangerous to be of
any practical use.(Schuck p. 87) Although its explosive power greatly
exceeded that of gun powder, the liquid would explode in a very
unpredictable manner if subjected to heat and pressure.
Alfred Nobel became very interested in nitroglycerin and how it could be
put to practical use in construction work. He also realized that the
safety problems had to be solved and a method had to be developed for
the controlled detonation of nitroglycerin. In the United States he
visited John Ericsson, the Swedish-American engineer who had developed
the screw propeller for ships. In 1852, Alfred Nobel was asked to come
back and work in the family enterprise which was booming because of its
deliveries to the Russian army. Together with his father he performed
experiments to develop nitroglycerin as a commercially and technically
useful explosive. As the war ended and conditions changed, Immanuel
Nobel was again forced into bankruptcy. Immanuel and two of his sons,
Alfred and Emil, left St. Petersburg together and returned to Stockholm.
His other two sons, Robert and Ludvig, remained in St. Petersburg. With
some difficulties they managed to salvage the family enterprise and then
went on to develop the oil industry in the southern part of the Russian
empire. They were very successful and became some of the wealthiest
persons of their time. (Compton's)
After his return to Sweden in 1863, Alfred Nobel concentrated on
developing nitroglycerin as an explosive. Several explosions, including
one (1864) in which his brother Emil and several other persons were
killed, convinced the authorities that nitroglycerin production was
exceedingly dangerous. They forbade further experimentation with
nitroglycerin within the Stockholm city limits and Alfred Nobel had to
move his experimentation to a barge anchored on Lake Mälaren. Alfred was
not discouraged and in 1864 he was able to start mass production of
nitroglycerin. To make the handling of nitroglycerin safer Alfred Nobel
experimented with different additives. He soon found that mixing
nitroglycerin with silica would turn the liquid into a paste which could
be shaped into rods of a size and form suitable for insertion into
drilling holes.(Internet Site) In 1867 he patented this material under
the name of dynamite. To be able to detonate the dynamite rods he also
invented a detonator (blasting cap) which could be ignited by lighting a
fuse. These inventions were made at the same time as the diamond
drilling crown and the pneumatic drill came into general use. Together
these inventions drastically reduced the cost of blasting rock, drilling
tunnels, building canals and many other forms of construction work. The
market for dynamite and detonating caps grew very rapidly and Alfred
Nobel also proved himself to be a very skillful entrepreneur and
business man.
By 1865 his factory in Krümmel near Hamburg, Germany, was exporting
nitroglycerin explosives to other countries in Europe, America and
Australia. Over the years he founded factories and laboratories in some
90 different places in more than 20 countries.(Encarta) Although he
lived in Paris much of his life he was constantly traveling. Victor Hugo
at one time described him as "Europe's richest vagabond." When he was
not traveling or engaging in business activities Nobel himself worked
intensively in his various laboratories, first in Stockholm and later in
Hamburg (Germany), Ardeer (Scotland), Paris (France), Karlskoga (Sweden)
and San Remo (Italy). He focused on the development of explosives
technology as well as other chemical inventions, including such
materials as synthetic rubber and leather, artificial silk etc. By the
time of his death in 1896 he had 355 patents.(Compton's)
Intensive work and travel did not leave much time for a private life. At
the age of 43 he was feeling like an old man. At this time he advertised
in a newspaper "Wealthy, highly educated elderly gentleman seeks lady of
mature age, versed in
languages, as secretary and supervisor of household." The most qualified
applicant turned out to be an Austrian woman, Countess Bertha Kinsky.
After working for Nobel for about two months she decided to return to
Austria to marry Count Arthur on Suture. In spite of this Alfred Nobel
and Bertha von Suttner remained friends and kept writing letters to each
other for decades. Over the years Bertha von Suttner became increasingly
critical of the arms race. She wrote a famous book, titled, "Lay Down
Arms" and became a prominent figure in the peace movement. No doubt this
influenced Alfred Nobel when he wrote his final will which was to
include a Prize for persons or organizations who promoted peace. Several
years after the death of Alfred Nobel, the Norwegian Storting
(Parliament) decided to award the 1905 Nobel Peace Prize to Bertha von
Suttner.
Alfred Nobel's greatness lay in his ability to combine the penetrating
mind of the scientist and inventor with the forward-looking dynamism of
the industrialist. Nobel was very interested in social and peace-related
issues and held what were considered radical views in his era. He had a
great interest in literature and wrote his own poetry and dramatic
works. The Nobel Prizes became an extension and a fulfillment of his
lifetime interests.
Many of the companies founded by Nobel have developed into industrial
enterprises that still play a prominent role in the world economy, for
example Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI), Great Britain, Société
Centrale de Dynamite, France, and Dyno Industries in Norway. Toward the
end of his life, he acquired the company AB Bofors in Karlskoga, where
Björkborn Manor became his Swedish home.
Alfred Nobel died in San Remo, Italy, on December 10, 1896. When his
will was opened it came as a surprise that his fortune was to be used
for Prizes in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature and
Peace. The executors of his will were two young engineers, Ragnar
Sohlman and Rudolf Lilljequist. They set about forming the Nobel
Foundation as an organization to take care of the financial assets left
by Nobel for this purpose and to coordinate the work of the
Prize-Awarding Institutions. This was not without its difficulties since
the will was contested by relatives and questioned by authorities in
various countries.
But as we all know, the legacy of Alfred Nobel lives on today. The
prizes named after him are still the most coveted prizes for the
recipients in their respective fields. Everyone will remember Alfred
Nobel as a daring pioneer who knew no limits.
Many of the new advanced scientific discoveries made in the last century
were surely helped out by the work of Nobel. His Nobel prizes reward
people of science and enable them to keep churning out new ways of
accomplishing new feats that have never been attempted before.
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