arrangement remained the same. This second machine was finished
in 1739. It was more simple in its
arrangement, and less
cumbrous in its dimensions. It answered even better than the
first, and though it was not tried at sea its motions were
sufficiently exact for
finding the
longitude within the nearest
limits proposed by Act of Parliament.
Not satisfied with his two machines, Harrison proceeded to make a
third. This was of an improved
construction" target="_blank" title="n.建设;修建;结构">
construction, and occupied still
less space, the whole of the machine and its
apparatus standing
upon an area of only four square feet. It was in such
forwardness in January, 1741, that it was exhibited before the
Royal Society, and twelve of the most
prominent members signed a
certificate of "its great and excellent use, as well for
determining the
longitude at sea as for correcting the charts of
the coasts." The testimonial concluded: "We do
recommend Mr.
Harrison to the favour of the Commissioners appointed by Act of
Parliament as a person highly deserving of such further
encouragement and
assistance as they shall judge proper and
sufficient to finish his third machine." The Commissioners
granted him a further sum of 500L. Harrison was already reduced
to necessitous circumstances by his
continuousapplication to the
improvement of the timekeepers. He had also got into debt, and
required further
assistance to
enable him to proceed with their
construction" target="_blank" title="n.建设;修建;结构">
construction; but the Commissioners would only help him by
driblets.
Although Harrison had promised that the third machine would be
ready for trial on August 1, 1743, it was not finished for some
years later. In June, 1746, we find him again appearing before
the Board, asking for further
assistance. While
proceeding with
his work he found it necessary to add a new spring, "having spent
much time and thought in tempering them." Another 500L. was
voted to
enable him to pay his debts, to
maintain himself and
family, and to complete his chronometer.
Three years later he exhibited his third machine to the Royal
Society, and on the 30th of November, 1749, he was awarded the
Gold Medal for the year. In presenting it, Mr. Folkes, the
President, said to Mr. Harrison, "I do here, by the authority and
in the name of the Royal Society of London for the improving of
natural knowledge, present you with this small but
faithful token
of their regard and
esteem. I do, in their name
congratulate you
upon the successes you have already had, and I most sincerely
wish that all your future trials may in every way prove
answerable to these beginnings, and that the full accomplishment
of your great
undertaking may at last be crowned with all the
reputation and
advantage to yourself that your warmest wishes may
suggest, and to which so many years so laudably and so
diligently
spent in the
improvement of those
talents which God Almighty has
bestowed upon you, will so
justlyentitle your
constant and
unwearied perseverance."
Mr. Folkes, in his speech, spoke of Mr. Harrison as "one of the
most
modest persons he had ever known. In speaking," he
continued, "of his own performances, he has
assured me that, from
the
immense number of
diligent and
accurate experiments he has
made, and from the
severe tests to which he has in many ways put
his
instrument, he expects he shall be able with sufficient
certainty, through all the greatest
variety of seasons and the
most
irregular motions of the sea, to keep time
constantly,
without the
variation of so much as three seconds in a week, --a
degree of exactness that is
astonishing and even stupendous,
considering the
immense number of difficulties, and those of very
different sorts, which the author of these
inventions must have
had to
encounter and struggle withal."
Although it is common enough now to make first-rate
chronometers-- sufficient to determine the
longitude with almost
perfect
accuracy in every clime of the world--it was very
different at that time, when Harrison was occupied with his
laborious experiments. Although he considered his third machine
to be the ne plus ultra of
scientificmechanism, he nevertheless
proceeded to
construct a fourth timepiece, in the form of a
pocket watch about five inches in
diameter. He found the
principles which he had adopted in his larger machines
appliedequally well in the smaller, and the performances of the last
surpassed his
utmost expectations. But in the
meantime, as his
third timekeeper was, in his opinion, sufficient to supply the
requirements of the Board of Longitude as respected the highest
reward offered, he
applied to the Commissioners for leave to try
that
instrument on board a royal ship to some port in the West
Indies, as directed by the
statute of Queen Anne.
Though Harrison's third timekeeper was finished about the year
1758, it was not until March 12, 1761, that he received orders
for his son William to proceed to Portsmouth, and go on board the
Dorsetshire man-of-war, to proceed to Jamaica. But another
tedious delay occurred. The ship was ordered
elsewhere, and
William Harrison, after remaining five months at Portsmouth,
returned to London. By this time, John Harrison had finished his
fourth timepiece--the small one, in the form of a watch. At
length William Harrison set sail with this timekeeper from
Portsmouth for Jamaica, on November 18th, 1761, in the Deptford
man-of-war. The Deptford had forty-three ships in convoy, and
arrived at Jamaica on the l9th of January, 1762, three days
before the Beaver, another of His Majesty's ships-of-war, which
had sailed from Portsmouth ten days before the Deptford, but had
lost her
reckoning and been deceived in her
longitude, having
trusted entirely to the log. Harrison's timepiece had corrected
the log of the Deptford to the
extent of three degrees of
longitude,
whilst several of the ships in the fleet lost as much
as five degrees! This shows the haphazard way in which
navigation was conducted
previous to the
invention of the marine
chronometer.
When the Deptford arrived at Port Royal, Jamaica, the timekeeper
was found to be only five and one tenth seconds in error; and
during the
voyage of four months, on its return to Portsmouth on
March 26th, 1762, it was found (after allowing for the rate of
gain or loss) to have erred only one minute fifty-four and a half
seconds. In the
latitude of Portsmouth this only amounted to
eighteen
geographical miles,
whereas the Act had awarded that the
prize should be given where the
longitude was determined within
the distance of thirty
geographical miles. One would have
thought that Harrison was now clearly
entitled to his
reward of
20,000L.
Not at all! The delays interposed by Government are long and
tedious, and sometimes insufferable. Harrison had accomplished
more than was needful to
obtain the highest
reward which the
Board of Longitude had
publicly offered. But they would not
certify that he had won the prize. On the
contrary, they started
numerous objections, and continued for years to subject him to
vexatious delays and disappointments. They pleaded that the
previousdetermination of the
longitude of Jamaica by
astronomical
observation was
unsatisfactory; that there was no
proof of the chronometer having
maintained a uniform rate during
the
voyage; and on the 17th of August, 1762, they passed a
resolution, stating that they "were of opinion that the
experiments made of the watch had not been sufficient to
determine the
longitude at sea."
It was
accordingly necessary for Harrison to
petition Parliament
on the subject. Three reigns had come and gone since the Act of
Parliament
offering the
reward had been passed. Anne had died;
George I. and George II. had reigned and died; and now, in the
reign of George III.--thirty-five years after Harrison had begun
his labours, and after he had
constructed four several marine
chronometers, each of which was
entitled to win the full