Come at me England

Caporegime
Joined
21 Jun 2006
Posts
38,367
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_inventions_and_discoveries

The average Englishman in the home he call his castle slips into his national costume, a shabby raincoat, patented by Chemist Charles Macintosh (Mac)from Glasgow, Scotland.
En-route to his office he strides along the English lane, surfaced by John Macadam (Tar Macadam)of Ayr, Scotland.
He drives an English car fitted with tyres invented by John Boyd Dunlop,(DUNLOP Tyres) Veterinary Surgeon of Dreghorn, Scotland.
At the office he receives the mail bearing adhesive stamps invented by John Chalmers, Bookseller and Printer of Dundee, Scotland.
During the day he uses the telephone invented by Alexander Graham Bell, born in Edinburgh, Scotland. At home in the evening his daughter pedals her bicycle invented by Kirkpatrick Macmillan, Blacksmith of Thornhill, Dumfriesshire, Scotland.
He watches the news on television, an invention of John Logie Baird of Helensburgh, Scotland, and hears an item about the U.S. Navy founded by John Paul Jones of Kirkbean, Scotland.
Nowhere can an Englishman turn to escape the ingenuity of the Scots.
He has by now been reminded too much of Scotland and in desperation he picks up the Bible, only to find that the first man mentioned in the good book is a Scot, King James VI, who authorized its translation.
He could take to drink but the Scots make the best in the world Whisky.
He could take a rifle and end it all, but the breech-loading rifle was invented by Captain Patrick Ferguson of Pitfours, Scotland.
If he escaped death, he could find himself on an operating table injected with penicillin, discovered by Sir Alexander Fleming of Darvel, Scotland, and given chloroform, an anesthetic discovered by Sir James Young Simpson, Obstetrician and Gynecologist of Bathgate, Scotland.
Out of the anesthetic he would find no comfort in learning that he was as safe as the Bank of England founded by William Paterson of Dumfries, Scotland.

Decided to go pro Scottish for once.
 
The average Englishman, Scotsman, or any other person is probably descended from a mix of nationalities and racial stocks over many generations. So who really cares?
 
Improved seed drill - Jethro Tull[1]
Steam-driven ploughing engine - John Fowler[2]
Pioneer of selective breeding and artificial selection - Robert Bakewell[3]
Superphosphate or chemical fertilizer - John Bennet Lawes[4]
Pioneer of the development in dairy farming systems - Rex Paterson[5]
The first commercially successful light farm tractor - Dan Albone[6]
Water desalination process - Sir Francis Bacon[7]

[edit] Clock making

Anchor escapement - Robert Hooke[8]
First accurate atomic clock - Louis Essen[9]
Balance spring - Robert Hooke[10]
Balance wheel - Robert Hooke[11]
Co-axial escapement - George Daniels
Grasshopper escapement, H1, H2, H3 and H4 watches (a watch built to solve the longitude measurement problem)[12] - John Harrison
Gridiron pendulum - John Harrison[11]
Lever escapement The greatest single improvement ever applied to pocket watches - Thomas Mudge[11]
Marine chronometer - John Harrison[11]

[edit] Clothing manufacturing

Derby Rib (stocking manufacture) - Jedediah Strutt
Flying shuttle - John Kay
Mauveine, the first synthetic organic dye - William Henry Perkin
Power loom - Edmund Cartwright
Spinning frame - John Kay
Spinning jenny - James Hargreaves
Spinning mule - Samuel Crompton
Polyester - John Rex Whinfield
Sewing machine - Thomas Saint in 1790[13]
Water frame - Richard Arkwright
Stocking frame - William Lee
Warp-loom and Bobbinet - John Heathcoat

[edit] Communications

Uniform Penny Post, and postage stamp [14] - Sir Rowland Hill
Christmas card [15] - Sir Henry Cole
Valentines card [16] - Modern card 18th century England
Pencil - Cumbria, England
Mechanical pencil - Sampson Mordan and John Isaac Hawkins in 1822.[17]
Clockwork radio [18] - Trevor Baylis
The first Radio transmission using a Spark Transmitter, achieving a range of approximately 500 metres. - David E. Hughes
Electromagnetic induction & Faraday's law of induction Began as a series of experiments by Faraday that later became some of the first ever experiments in the discovery of radio waves and the development of radio - Michael Faraday [19]
Pioneer in the development of radio communication - William Eccles
Tin can telephone a device that conveyed sounds over an extended wire by mechanical vibrations - Robert Hooke 1667 [20]
The world's first radio station on the Isle of Wight
On December 2, 1922, in Sorbonne, France, Edwin Belin, an Englishman demonstrated a mechanical scanning device that was an early precursor to modern television
The first pocket sized handheld television, the MTV-1 - Sir Clive Sinclair
Pioneering work on the development of the long-lasting materials that made today's liquid crystal displays possible - Team headed by Sir Brynmor Jones and Developed by Scotsman George Gray and Englishman Ken Harrison In conjunction with the Royal Radar Establishment and the University of Hull [21]
The first public demonstration of television On 26 January 1926 at 22 Frith Street London - John Logie Baird
405-line television system was the first fully electronic television system used in regular broadcasting - Alan Blumlein
The world's first public broadcasts of high-definition television were made from Alexandra Palace, North London in 1936 - BBC Television Service
The first commercially successful electric telegraph - Sir Charles Wheatstone and Sir William Fothergill Cooke in 1837 [22][23][24]
Pioneer of stereo - Alan Blumlein [25]
Shorthand - Timothy Bright (1550/1-1615). Invented first modern shorthand
Pitman Shorthand - Isaac Pitman
Discovered the photoconductivity of the element selenium. This discovery led to the invention of photoelectric cells (solar panels), including those used in the earliest television systems - Willoughby Smith in 1873
Proposed the existence of the Kennelly–Heaviside layer, a layer of ionised gas that reflects radio waves around the Earth's curvature - Oliver Heaviside
Important improvements of the facsimile machine (Fax Machine) - Frederick Bakewell
The first SMS message was sent over the Vodafone GSM network in 1992 - Neil Papworth
Typewriter - First patent for a device similar to a typewriter granted to Henry Mill in 1714.[26]
the world's first automatic totalisator - George Julius
pioneer in the use of fiber optics in telecommunications - Charles K. Kao and George Hockham
The originator of the concept of geostationary satellites for the use of telecommunications relays - Arthur C Clarke
Teletext Information Service - The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

[edit] Computing

Analytical engine [27] - Sir Charles Babbage
ACE and Pilot ACE [28] - Alan Turing
ARM architecture The ARM CPU design is the microprocessor architecture of 98% of mobile phones and every smartphone.[29]
Bombe [28] - Alan Turing
Colossus computer [30] Colossus computers were the first electronic digital programmable computers. They used vacuum tubes and binary representation of numbers - Tommy Flowers
Difference engine [27] - Sir Charles Babbage
First programmer - Ada Lovelace
First Programming Language Analytical Engine ordercode - Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace
Boolean algebra, the basis for digital logic - George Boole
World Wide Web [31] - Sir Tim Berners-Lee
Developed HTTP and HTML - Tim Berners-Lee
Argo system the world's first electrically powered mechanical analogue computer (also called at the Argo Clock) - Arthur Pollen
Sumlock ANITA calculator the world's first all-electronic desktop calculator - Bell Punch Co
Sinclair Executive, the world's first small electronic pocket calculator - Sir Clive Sinclair
Osborne 1 The first commercially successful portable computer, the precursor to the Laptop computer - Adam Osborne
Designed what was the first laptop computer, the GRiD Compass in 1979 - Bill Moggridge
Heavily involved in the development of the Linux kernel - Andrew Morton & Alan Cox
Sinclair ZX80, ZX81 and ZX Spectrum - Sir Clive Sinclair
Flip-flop circuit, which became the basis of electronic memory (Random-access memory) in computers - William Eccles and F. W. Jordan
Universal Turing machine - The UTM model is considered to be the origin of the "stored program computer" used by John von Neumann in 1946 for his "Electronic Computing Instrument" that now bears von Neumann's name: the von Neumann architecture, also UTM is considered the first operating system - Alan Turing
The development of packet switching co-invented by British engineer Donald Davies and American Paul Baran - National Physical Laboratory, London England
The first person to conceptualise the Integrated Circuit - Geoffrey W.A. Dummer
The first modern computer Manchester Small-Scale Experimental Machine - (SSEM), nicknamed Baby. Was the world's first stored-program computer. Developed by Frederic Calland Williams & Tom Kilburn[32]
Williams tube - a cathode ray tube used to electronically store binary data (Can store roughly 500 to 1,000 bits of data) - Freddie Williams & Tom Kilburn
Manchester Mark 1 Historically significant computer because of its pioneering inclusion of index registers - Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn
Autocode regarded as the first ever computer compiler in 1952 for the Manchester Mark 1 computer - Alick Glennie
Developed the concept of microprogramming from the realisation that the Central Processing Unit (CPU) of a computer could be controlled by a miniature, highly specialised computer program in high-speed ROM - Maurice Wilkes in 1951
Ferranti Mark 1 - Also known as the Manchester Electronic Computer was the first computer to use the principles of early CPU design (Central processing unit) - Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn - Also the world's first successful commercially available general-purpose electronic computer.
The oldest known recordings of computer generated music were played by the Ferranti Mark 1 computer - Christopher Strachey
EDSAC was the first complete, fully functional computer to use the von Neumann architecture, the basis of every modern computer - Maurice Wilkes
EDSAC 2 the successor to the Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator or EDSAC. It was the first computer to have a microprogrammed (Microcode)control unit and a bit slice hardware architecture - Team headed by Maurice Wilkes
The first graphical computer game OXO on the EDSAC at Cambridge University - A.S. Douglas
The world's first computer game with 3D graphics - Elite Developed by David Braben and Ian Bell in 1984
Metrovick 950 was the first commercial transistor computer built in 1959 - Metropolitan-Vickers company
LEO Made history by running the first business application (payroll system) on an electronic computer in 1951 for J. Lyons and Co - Maurice Wilkes
Atlas Computer, it was arguably the world's first supercomputer and was the fastest computer in the world until the release of the American CDC 6600 Also This machine introduced many modern architectural concepts: spooling, interrupts, pipelining, interleaved memory, virtual memory and paging - Team headed by Tom Kilburn
The world's first web browser called WorldWideWeb that ran on the NeXTSTEP platform. It was later renamed Nexus to avoid confusion with the World Wide Web - Sir Tim Berners-Lee
Digital audio player (MP3 Player) - Kane Kramer
Touchpad Pointing device - First developed for Psion PLC's Psion MC 200/400/600/WORD Series in 1989
Co-Inventor of the world's first trackball device - developed by Tom Cranston, Fred Longstaff and Kenyon Taylor
The world's first handheld computer (Psion Organiser) - Psion PLC
The first rugged computer - Husky (computer)
First PC-compatible palmtop computer (Atari Portfolio) - Ian Cullimore
Denotational semantics - Christopher Strachey pioneer in programming language design
Wolfram's 2-state 3-symbol Turing machine - Stephen Wolfram

[edit] Criminology

DNA fingerprinting - Sir Alec Jeffreys[33]
The world's first national DNA database developed in 1995
Devised a method for classifying fingerprints that proved useful in forensic science - Francis Galton[34]
Iris recognition - John Daugman[35]
Chemist who developed the Marsh test for detecting arsenic poisoning - James Marsh[36]

[edit] Cryptography

Playfair cipher - Charles Wheatstone[24]
Bacon's cipher - Sir Francis Bacon
RSA cipher - Clifford ****s developed the RSA algorithm at GCHQ, approximately three years before it was independently developed by Rivest, Shamir and Adleman at MIT. The British government were not interested in using ****s' algorithm, so it was classified until 1998, when it was revealed that he had developed RSA before Rivest et al.[37]

[edit] Engineering

Adjustable spanner - Edwin Beard Budding
Cavity magnetron - John Randall and Harry Boot critical component for Microwave generation in Microwave ovens and high powered Radios (Radar)[38]
Carey Foster bridge - Carey Foster[39]
Electric transformer - Michael Faraday[40]
First coke-consuming blast furnace - Abraham Darby I[41]
First working universal joint - Robert Hooke
Produced the first commercial steel alloy in 1868 - Robert Forester Mushet
Crookes tube the first cathode ray tubes - William Crookes[41]
First compression ignition engine aka the Diesel Engine - Herbert Akroyd Stuart
First working steam pump - Thomas Savery in 1698[41]
Atmospheric steam engine - Thomas Newcomen in 1712[41][42]
Modified version of the Newcomen steam engine (Pickard engine) - James Pickard
Steam turbine - Charles Algernon Parsons[41]
Pendulum governor - Frederick Lanchester
High strength carbon fiber - Royal Aircraft Establishment in 1963 - Also on January 14, 1969 Carr Reinforcements (Stockport, England) wove the first carbon fiber fabric in the world
Contributed to the development of Radar - Scotsman Robert Watson-Watt and Englishman Arnold Frederic Wilkins
Disc brakes - Frederick W. Lanchester[41]
Internal combustion engine - Samuel Brown
Fourdrinier machine - Henry Fourdrinier
Microchip - Geoffrey W.A. Dummer
light-emitting diode (did not invent the first visible light, only theorised)- H. J. Round
Francis turbine - James B. Francis
Gas turbine - John Barber (engineer)
Two-stroke engine - Joseph Day
Pioneer of radio guidance systems - Archibald Low
Screw-cutting lathe - Henry Hindley
The first industrially practical screw-cutting lathe - Henry Maudslay
The first electrical measuring instrument, the electroscope - William Gilbert
Rectilinear Slide rule - William Oughtred[11]
Devised a standard for screw threads leading to its widespread acceptance - Joseph Whitworth
The Wimshurst machine is an Electrostatic generator for producing high voltages - James Wimshurst
Hot bulb engine or heavy oil engine - Herbert Akroyd Stuart
Hydraulic crane - William George Armstrong
Vacuum diode also known as a vacuum tube - John Ambrose Fleming
Linear motor is a multi-phase alternating current (AC) electric motor - Charles Wheatstone then improved by Eric Laithwaite[24]
Designed water and sewerage systems for over 30 cities across Europe - William Lindley
The Iron Bridge (1791), the first metal bridge of any kind - Abraham Darby III[41]
The world's first house powered with hydroelectricity - Cragside, Northumberland[citation needed]
Wind tunnel - Francis Herbert Wenham[11]

[edit] Food

Bangers and mash
Bird's Custard - Alfred Bird
Black Pudding
Branston Pickle
Brown Sauce (HP Sauce)
Bubble and Squeak
Cheddar cheese[43] - modern cheddar cheese manufacture Joseph Harding
Cornish pasty
Cottage pie
Cumberland sausage
Eccles cake
English mustard
Fish and Chips
Full English breakfast
Gravy
Haggis - Normally assumed to be of Scottish origin, but the first known written recipe for a dish of the name (as 'hagese'), made with offal and herbs, is in the verse cookbook Liber Cure Cocorum dating from around 1430 in Lancashire, North-West England.[44]
Ice cream [45] - Modern Ice cream 1718 England
Jellied eels
Kendal mint cake
Lancashire hotpot
Lincolnshire sausage
Marmite
Pancake [46] - Modern pancake, English culinary manuscript 1430
Parkin
Pasty
Piccalilli
Pork pie
Sandwich - John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich
Scotch egg - Invented by the famous London department store, Fortnum & Mason, in 1738.
Scouse
Shepherd's pie
Carbonated water, major and defining component of soft drinks [47] - Joseph Priestley
Spotted Dick
Steak and kidney pie
Sunday roast
Toad in the hole
Worcestershire sauce[48]
Yorkshire Pudding

[edit] Household appliances

Ballbarrow - James Dyson[49]
Perambulator - William Kent designed a baby carriage in 1733[50]
Collapsible baby buggy - Owen Maclaren
Domestic dishwasher - key modifications by William Howard Livens [51]
"Bagless" vacuum cleaner - James Dyson[49]
"Puffing Billy" - First powered vacuum cleaner - Hubert Cecil Booth[52][53][54]
Fire extinguisher - George William Manby[50]
Folding carton - Charles Henry Foyle
Lawn mower - Edwin Beard Budding[55]
Rubber band - Stephen Perry[56]
Daniell cell - John Frederic Daniell[57]
First incandescent light bulb - Joseph Wilson Swan in 1878.[58][59]
Tin can - Peter Durand
Light switch - Invented by John Holmes in 1884
Corkscrew - Reverend Samuell Henshall
Mouse trap - James Henry Atkinson
Postage stamp - Rowland Hill
Modern flushing toilet - John Harington[60]
The pay toilet - John Nevil Maskelyne, Maskelyne invented a lock for London toilets, which required a penny to operate, hence the euphemism "spend a penny".
Electric toaster - Rookes Evelyn Bell Crompton
Teasmade - Albert E. Richardson
Magnifying glass - Roger Bacon
Thermosiphon, which forms the basis of most modern central heating systems - Thomas Fowler
Automatic electric kettle - Russell Hobbs

[edit] Industrial processes

English crucible steel - Benjamin Huntsman
Steel production Bessemer process - Henry Bessemer
Hydraulic press - Joseph Bramah
Fourdrinier machine is the basis for most modern papermaking machines - Henry Fourdrinier
Parkesine, the first man-made plastic - Alexander Parkes
Portland cement - Joseph Aspdin
Sheffield plate - Thomas Boulsover
Water frame - Richard Arkwright
Stainless steel - Harry Brearley
Rubber Masticator - Thomas Han****
Power Loom - Edmund Cartwright
Parkes process - Alexander Parkes
Lead chamber process - John Roebuck
Development of the world's first commercially successful manufacture of high quality flat glass using the float glass process - Alastair Pilkington
Pioneers of the Industrial Revolution - Isambard Kingdom Brunel - Abraham Darby I - Abraham Darby II - Abraham Darby III - Robert Forester Mushet
The first commercial electroplating process - George Elkington
The Wilson Yarn Clearer - Peter Wilson

[edit] Medicine

First correct description of circulation of the blood - William Harvey[61]
Smallpox vaccine - Edward Jenner with his discovery is said to have "saved more lives (...) than were lost in all the wars of mankind since the beginning of recorded history."[62][63][64]
Surgical forceps - Stephen Hales[65]
Antisepsis in surgery - Joseph Lister
Artificial intraocular lens transplant surgery for cataract patients - Harold Ridley[66]
Clinical thermometer - Thomas Clifford Allbutt.[67]
Colour blindness first described by John Dalton in Extraordinary facts relating to the vision of colours [68]
Credited with discovering how to culture embryonic stem cells in 1981 - Martin Evans
Carried out ground breaking research on the use of penicillin in the treatment of venereal disease with the Scottish scientist Sir Alexander Fleming in London - Jack Suchet
First blood pressure measurement and first cardiac catheterisation-Stephen Hales[69]
Pioneer of anaesthesia and father of epidemiology for locating the source of cholera - John Snow (physician)[70]
pioneered the use of sodium cromoglycate as a remedy for asthma - Roger Altounyan[citation needed]
The first scientist to demonstrate that a cancer may be caused by an environmental carcinogen and one of the founders of orthopedy - Percivall Pott[71]
Performed the first successful blood transfusion - James Blundell[72]
Discovered the active ingredient of Aspirin - Edward Stone
Discovery of Protein crystallography - Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
The world’s first successful stem cell transplant[citation needed] and the first British Bone Marrow Transplant using bone marrow from a matching sibling - John Raymond Hobbs[73]
First typhoid vaccine - Almroth Wright[74]
Pioneer of the treatment of epilepsy - Edward Henry Sieveking
discovery of Nitrous oxide (entonox\"laughing gas") and its anaesthetic properties - Humphrey Davy[75]
Ophthalmoscope - conceived by Charles Babbage in 1847[65]
Computed Tomography (CT scanner) - Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield
Gray's Anatomy widely regarded as the first complete human anatomy textbook - Henry Gray
Discovered Parkinson's disease - James Parkinson[76]
General anaesthetic - Pionered by Scotsman James Young Simpson and Englishman John Snow[70]
Contributed to the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) - Sir Peter Mansfield
The development of in vitro fertilization - Patrick Christopher Steptoe and Robert Geoffrey Edwards[77]
First baby genetically selected to be free of a breast cancer - University College London
Viagra - Peter Dunn, Albert Wood, Dr Nicholas Terrett[citation needed]
Pioneer of modern nursing - Florence Nightingale
Acetylcholine - Henry Hallett Dale
EKG (underlying principles) - various[vague]
Vitamins and Tryptophan - Frederick Gowland Hopkins
diagnostic ultrasound - John J. Wild (although his research was conducted in US)
Identifying the mosquito as the carrier of malaria: Sir Ronald Ross (1857–1932) (born India, educated in England; mother English and father Scottish)
Earliest pharmacopoeia in English[78]
The hip replacement operation, in which a stainless steel stem and 22mm head fit into a polymer socket and both parts are fixed into position by PMMA cement - pioneered by John Charnley
Description of Hay Fever - John Bostock (physician) in 1819

[edit] Military

The tank - Developed and first used in combat by the British during World War I as a means to break the deadlock of trench warfare.
Fighter aircraft - The Vickers F.B.5 Gunbus of 1914 was the first of its kind.
Congreve rocket - William Congreve
High explosive squash head - Sir Charles Dennistoun Burney
Shrapnel shell - Henry Shrapnel
Harrier Jump Jet
Bullpup firearm configuration - Thorneycroft carbine
Puckle Gun - James Puckle
The side by side Boxlock action, AKA The double barreled shotgun - Anson and Deeley
Dreadnought Battleship
Bailey Bridge - Donald Bailey
Chobham armour
Livens Projector - William Howard Livens[79]
H2S radar (airborne radar to aid the bomb targeting) - Alan Blumlein
Bouncing bomb - Barnes Wallis
Safety fuse - William Bickford
Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knife - William Ewart Fairbairn and Eric A. Sykes
Armstrong Gun - Sir William Armstrong
Depth charge
Stun grenades - Invented by the SAS in the 60s.
Smokeless propellant to replace gunpowder with the use of Cordite - Frederick Abel
Torpedo - Robert Whitehead
The Whitworth rifle, considered the first sniper rifle. During the American Civil War the Whitworth rifle had been known to kill at ranges of about 800 yards - Sir Joseph Whitworth
The world's first practical underwater active sound detection apparatus, the ASDIC Active Sonar - Developed by Canadian physicist Robert William Boyle and English physicist Albert Beaumont Wood
The first self-powered machine gun Maxim gun - Sir Hiram Maxim, Although the Inventor is American, the Maxim gun was financed by Albert Vickers of Vickers Limited company and produced in Hatton Garden London
Steam catapult-Commander Colin C. Mitchell RNVR

[edit] Mining

Davy lamp - Humphry Davy
Geordie lamp - George Stephenson
Beam engine - Used for pumping water from mines

[edit] Musical instruments

Concertina - Charles Wheatstone[24]
Theatre organ - Robert Hope-Jones
English horn - A version of the Oboe
Logical bassoon, an electronically controlled version of the bassoon - Giles Brindley
Northumbrian smallpipes
Tuning fork - John Shore

[edit] Photography

Ambrotype - Frederick Scott Archer[80]
Calotype - William Fox Talbot[81]
Collodion process - Frederick Scott Archer[80]
Collodion-albumen process - Joseph Sidebotham in 1861
Stereoscope - Charles Wheatstone[23][24]
Thomas Wedgwood - pioneer of photography, devised the method to copy visible images chemically to permanent media.
Dry plate process also known as gelatine process, is the first economically successful durable photographic medium - Richard Leach Maddox
Kinemacolor was the first successful colour motion picture process, used commercially from 1908 to 1914 - George Albert Smith
cinematography - William Friese-Greene
Motion picture camera, the Kinetoscope - William Kennedy Laurie Dickson
The first movie projector, the Zoopraxiscope - Eadweard Muybridge
The first experimental film called "The Horse in Motion" in 1872 - Eadweard Muybridge

[edit] Publishing firsts

Oldest publisher and printer in the world (having been operating continuously since 1584): Cambridge University Press
first book printed in English: "The Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye" by Englishman William Caxton in 1475

[edit] Science

Modern atomic theory - Considered the father of modern chemistry, John Dalton's experiments with gases led to the development of what is called the modern atomic theory.[41][82]
Equals sign Robert Recorde, Welshman
Cell biology - Credit for the discovery of the first cells is given to Robert Hooke who described the microscopic compartments of cork cells in 1665[82]
Compound microscope with 30x magnification - Robert Hooke
Universal joint - Robert Hooke[citation needed]
Coggeshall slide rule - Henry Coggeshall
The Iris diaphragm - Robert Hooke
Correct theory of combustion - Robert Hooke
Partition chromatography - Richard Laurence Millington Synge and Archer J.P. Martin[83]
Arnold Frederic Wilkins - pioneer in the development of Radar
Atwood machine used for illustrating the law of uniformly accelerated motion - George Atwood
Marine Barometer - Robert Hooke[11]
Hooke's Law (equation describing elasticity) - Robert Hooke[11]
Electrical generator (dynamo) - Michael Faraday[40]
Faraday cage - Michael Faraday[40]
Magneto-optical effect - Michael Faraday[40]
Calculus - Sir Isaac Newton
Infrared radiation - discovery commonly attributed to William Herschel.
Holography - First developed by Dennis Gabor in Rugby, England. Improved by Nicholas J. Phillips who made it possible to record multi-colour reflection holograms
Discovery of the pion (pi-meson) - Cecil Frank Powell
Wheatstone bridge - Samuel Hunter Christie
Triple achromatic lens - Peter Dollond
Newtonian telescope - Sir Isaac Newton
Hawking radiation - Stephen Hawking
Demonstrated that electric circuits obey the law of the conservation of energy and that electricity is a form of energy First Law of Thermodynamics. Also the unit of energy, the Joule is named after him - James Prescott Joule
Micrometer - Sir William Gascoigne[citation needed]
the first bench micrometer that was capable of measuring to one ten thousandth of an inch - Henry Maudslay
Sinclair Executive, the world's first small electronic pocket calculator - Sir Clive Sinclair
Discovered the element argon - John Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh with Scotsman William Ramsay
Standard deviation - Francis Galton
Slide rule - William Oughtred [84]
Synthesis of coumarin, one of the first synthetic perfumes, and cinnamic acid via the Perkin reaction- William Henry Perkin
The Law of Gravity - Sir Isaac Newton
Newton's laws of motion - Sir Isaac Newton
Geological Timescale - Arthur Holmes[85]
Electromagnet - William Sturgeon in 1823.[82]
Helium - Norman Lockyer
Weather map [86] - Sir Francis Galton
Introduced the symbol for "is less than" and "is greater than" - Thomas Harriot 1630
Introduced the "×" symbol for multiplication as well as the abbreviations "sin" and "cos" for the sine and cosine functions - William Oughtred
Dew Point Hygrometer - John Frederic Daniell
Periodic Table - John Alexander Reina Newlands
Splitting the atom - John ****croft and Irish physicist Ernest Walton
Seismograph - John Milne
Discovery of oxygen gas (O2) - Joseph Priestley
Discovery of the Atom(nuclear model of) - Ernest Rutherford
Discovery of the Proton - Ernest Rutherford
Discovery of the Electron, isotopes and the inventor of the Mass spectrometer - J. J. Thomson
Discovery of the Neutron - James Chadwick
Discovery of Hydrogen - Henry Cavendish
Nuclear transfer - Is a form of cloning first put into practice by Ian Wilmut and Keith Campbell to clone Dolly the Sheep
Theory of Evolution - Charles Darwin

[edit] Astronomy

Discovery of the planet Uranus[87] and the moons Titania, Oberon, Enceladus, Mimas [88] by Sir William Herschel
Discovery of Triton[89] and the moons Hyperion, Ariel and Umbriel - William Lassell[90]
Planetarium - John Theophilus Desaguliers
Predicts the existence and location of Neptune from irregularities in the orbit of Uranus - John Couch Adams [91]
Important contributions to the development of radio astronomy - Bernard Lovell [92]
Newtonian telescope - Sir Isaac Newton [93]
Achromatic doublet lens - John Dollond [94]
Coining the phrase 'Big Bang' - Fred Hoyle [95]
First theorised existence of black holes, binary stars; invented torsion balance - John Michell[96]
Stephen Hawking - World-renowned theoretical physicist made many important contributions to the fields of cosmology and quantum gravity, especially in the context of black holes
Spiral galaxies - William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse [97]
Discovery of Halley's Comet - Edmond Halley [98]
Discovery of pulsars - Antony Hewish [99]
Discovery of Sunspots and was the first person to make a drawing of the Moon through a telescope - Thomas Harriot [100]
The Eddington limit, the natural limit to the luminosity of stars, or the radiation generated by accretion onto a compact object - Arthur Stanley Eddington [101]
Aperture synthesis, used for accurate location and imaging of weak radio sources in the field of Radio astronomy - Martin Ryle and Antony Hewish [102]

[edit] Chemistry

Dalton's law and Law of multiple proportions - John Dalton [103]
The structure of DNA and pioneering the field of molecular biology - co-developed by Francis Crick [104] and the American James Watson
DNA sequencing by chain termination - Frederick Sanger [105]
Discovery of introns in eukaryotic DNA and the mechanism of gene-splicing - Richard J. Roberts [106]
Discovey of Buckminsterfullerene - Sir Harry Kroto [107]
Discovery of thallium - William Crookes[41]
Discovered the structure of ferrocene - Geoffrey Wilkinson & others [108]
Discovers hydrogen as a colorless, odourless gas that burns and can form an explosive mixture with air - Henry Cavendish [109]
Proposes the law of octaves, a precursor to the Periodic Law - John Newlands [110]
Bragg's law and establish the field of X-ray crystallography, an important tool for elucidating the crystal structure of substances - William Henry Bragg and William Lawrence Bragg [111]
Introduces concept of atomic number to fix inadequacies of Mendeleev's periodic table, which had been based on atomic weight - Henry Moseley [112]
First isolation of sodium - Humphry Davy [113]
First isolation of potassium - Humphry Davy[41]
First isolation of boron - Humphry Davy[41]
First isolation of benzene, the first known aromatic hydrocarbon - Michael Faraday[114]
Publishes Opus Maius, which among other things, proposes an early form of the scientific method, and contains results of his experiments with gunpowder - Roger Bacon [115]
Publishes several Aristotelian commentaries, an early framework for the scientific method - Robert Grosseteste [116]
Baconian method, an early forerunner of the scientific method - Sir Francis Bacon[117]
The first discovery of aluminium - Sir Humphry Davy
Pioneer in early Solar Power - Weston cell - Edward Weston (chemist)[citation needed]
Proposes the concept of isotopes, elements with the same chemical properties may have differing atomic weights - Frederick Soddy[41]
The synthesising of xenon hexafluoroplatinate the first time to show that noble gases can form chemical compounds - Neil Bartlett
Callendar effect the theory that linked rising carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere to global temperature (Global warming) - Guy Stewart Callendar
Pioneer of the fuel cell - Francis Thomas Bacon[118]
Pioneer of meteorology by developing a nomenclature system for clouds in 1802 - Luke Howard[119]
Rayleigh scattering explains why the sky is blue, and predicted the existence of the surface waves - John Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh[120]

[edit] Sport

Football - The rules as we know them today were established in 1848 at Cambridge University, Sheffield F.C. is acknowledged by The Football Association and FIFA as the world's first and oldest football club.[121]
Rugby - William Webb Ellis
Cricket - the world's second-most popular sport can be traced back to the 13th century[122]
Tennis - widely known to have originated in England.[123]
Badminton - Modern rules of the game was launched in 1873 at the Badminton House after being imported from India by British soldiers.
Boxing - England played a key role in the evolution of modern boxing. Boxing was first accepted as an Olympic sport in Ancient Greece in 688 BC
Darts - a traditional pub game, the numbering layout was devised by Brian Gamlin
Table-Tennis - was invented on the dinner tables of Britain as an indoor version of tennis
Snooker - Invented by the British Army in India[124]
Ping pong - The game has its origins in England, in the 1880s
Bowls - has been traced to 13th century England[125]
Field hockey - the modern game grew from English public schools in the early 19th century
Netball - the sport emerged from early versions of women's basketball, at Madame Österberg's College in England during the late 1890s.[126]
Rounders - the game originates in England most likely from an older game known as stool ball
The Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race, the first race was in 1829 on the River Thames in London [127]
Thoroughbred Horseracing - Was first developed in 17th and 18th century England
Polo - its roots began in Persia as a training game for cavalry units, the formal codification of the rules of modern Polo as a sport were established in 19th century England
The format of Modern Olympics - William Penny Brookes
Modern Rock Climbing - Walter Parry Haskett Smith (1859–1946) is considered the Father of Rock Climbing.
The first Paralympic games competition were held in England in 1948 - Ludwig Guttmann[128]
oldest rowing competition in existence and oldest rowing race in the world: Doggett's Coat and Badge annual race on the Thames since 1715
oldest sporting competition in the world: The Antient Silver Arrow Archery competition known as the Scorton Arrow as it was originally held in Scorton , Yorkshire. It was first shot for in 1673.[129]
oldest cricket festival (and probably oldest sporting festival) in the world: Canterbury Cricket Week founded in 1842 [129]
Lonsdale belt: oldest boxing belt in the world[130]
oldest running race in the world - the Crick Run started in 1836 at rugby school

[edit] Transport
[edit] Aviation

Aeronautics and flight - George Cayley[131]
Jet engine - Sir Frank Whittle[132]
Steam Powered Flight with the Aerial Steam Carriage - John Stringfellow- The world's first powered flight took place at Chard in Somerset 55 years before the Wright brothers attempt at Kitty Hawk[133]
VTOL (Vertical Take-Off and Landing) fighter-bomber aircraft - Hawker P.1127, Designed by Sydney Camm[134]
The first commercial jet airliner (de Havilland Comet)[135]
Pioneer of parachute design - Robert ****ing
Pioneer of glider development & first well-documented human flight. He discovered and identified the four aerodynamic forces of flight - weight, lift, drag, and thrust. Modern airplane design is based on those discoveries including cambered wings. He is sometimes called the "Father of aviation" - George Cayley[131]
The first aircraft capable of supercruise - English Electric Lightning
Hale rockets, improved version of the Congreve rocket design that introduced Thrust vectoring - William Hale
The term airport - first used to describe the port city Southampton where boat planes landed in the nineteenth century

[edit] Railways

The first full scale railway steam locomotive was built in 1804 - Richard Trevithick[136]
Great Western Railway - Isambard Kingdom Brunel
Stockton and Darlington Railway the world's first operational steam passenger railway
First inter-city steam-powered railway - Liverpool and Manchester Railway

[edit] Locomotives

Blücher - George Stephenson
Puffing Billy -William Hedley
Locomotion No 1 - Robert Stephenson
Sans Pareil - Timothy Hackworth
Stourbridge Lion - Foster, Rastrick and Company
Stephenson's Rocket - George and Robert Stephenson
The Salamanca - Matthew Murray
Flying Scotsman- Sir Nigel Gresley[citation needed]

[edit] Other railway developments

Displacement lubricator, Ramsbottom safety valve, the water trough, the split piston ring - John Ramsbottom
Maglev (transport) rail system - Eric Laithwaite
World's oldest underground railway and the oldest rapid transit system. It was also the first underground railway to operate electric trains - London underground
Advanced Passenger Train(APT) was an experimental High Speed Train that introduced tilting - British Rail

[edit] Roads

Bowden cable - Frank Bowden
Cat's eye - Percy Shaw [137]
Hansom cab - Joseph Hansom
Seat belt - George Cayley[138]
Sinclair C5 - Sir Clive Sinclair
Inventor of tarmac - E. Purnell Hooley
Tension-spoke Wire wheels - George Cayley[131]
Belisha beacon - Leslie Hore-Belisha
ThrustSSC jet-propelled car holds the World Land Speed Record, it achieved a speed of 1,228 km/h (763 mph). The car was designed and built in England - ThrustSSC Project director Richard Noble, Designed by Ron Ayers, Glynne Bowsher, Jeremy Bliss and piloted by Andy Green
Lotus 25 Considered the first modern F1 race car designed for the 1962 Formula One season. It was a revolutionary design the first fully stressed monocoque chassis to appear in Formula One - Colin Chapman, Team Lotus
Horstmann suspension, tracked armoured fighting vehicle suspension - Sidney Horstmann
Steam fire engine - John Braithwaite
Safety bicycle - John Kemp Starley & Dan Albone
Penny-farthing - James Starley
First traffic lights installed (gas lamp) - Outside Houses of Parliament, London. December 10, 1868
First automatic traffic lights installed - Wolverhampton England. 1927
The oldest existing driving school and first formal driving tuition is the British School of Motoring, founded in 1910 in Peckham, London[139]

[edit] Sea

Plimsol line - Samuel Plimsoll
Hovercraft - Christopher ****erell
Lifeboat - Lionel Lukin
Resurgam - George Garrett
Transit (ship) - Richard Hall Gower
Submarine - Designed by Englishman William Bourne and built by Dutchman Cornelius Drebbel in 1620
SS Great Britain, the world's first steam-powered, screw propeller-driven passenger liner with an iron hull. Designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel and launched in 1843 it was at the time the largest ship afloat.
Turbinia, the first steam turbine powered steamship, designed by the engineer Sir Charles Algernon Parsons and built in Newcastle upon Tyne
Diving Equipment/Scuba Gear - Henry Fleuss
Diving bell - Edmund Halley
Sextant - John Bird
Octant (instrument) - Independently developed by Englishman John Hadley and the American Thomas Godfrey
Whirling speculum, This device can be seen as a precursor to the gyroscope - John Serson
Screw propeller - Francis Pettit Smith
The world's first patent for an underwater echo ranging device (Sonar) - Lewis Richardson
hydrophone Before the invention of Sonar convoy escort ships used them to detect U-boats, greatly lessening the effectiveness of the submarine - Research headed by Ernest Rutherford
Hydrofoil - John Isaac Thornycroft

[edit] Miscellaneous

Oldest police force in continuous operation: Marine Police Force founded in 1798 and now part of the Metropolitan Police Service
Oldest life insurance company in the world: Amicable Society for a Perpetual Assurance Office founded 1706
First Glee Club, founded in Harrow School in 1787.[140]
Oldest arts festival - Norwich 1772 [141]
Oldest music festival - The Three Choirs Festival
Oldest literary festival - The Cheltenham Literature Festival
Bayko - Charles Plimpton
Linoleum - Frederick Walton [142]
Meccano - Frank Hornby
Crossword puzzle - Arthur Wynne
Gas mask - (disputed) John Tyndall and others
Graphic telescope - Cornelius Varley
Steel-ribbed Umbrella - Samuel Fox
Plastic - Alexander Parkes
Plasticine - William Harbutt
Carbonated soft drink - Joseph Priestley
Friction Match - John Walker
Invented the rubber balloon - Michael Faraday
Earliest concept of a Metric system - John Wilkins
Edmondson railway ticket - Thomas Edmondson
The world's first Nature Reserve - Charles Waterton *Public Park - Joseph Paxton
Scouts - Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell
Spirograph - Denys Fisher
The Young Men's Christian Association YMCA was founded in London - George Williams (YMCA)
The Salvation Army, known for being one of the largest distributors of humanitarian aid - Methodist minister William Booth
Prime meridian - George Biddell Airy
Produced the first complete printed translation of the Bible into English - Myles Coverdale
Founder of the Bank of Scotland - John Holland
Venn diagram - John Venn
vulcanisation of rubber - Thomas Han****
Silicone - Frederick Kipping
Stamp collecting - John Edward Gray bought penny blacks on first day of issue in order to keep them
 
*yawn*

Bank of England wasnt founded by William Paterson btw. Couldn't be asked with the rest.

Miscellaneous innovations

Boys' Brigade [121]
Bank of England devised by William Paterson
Bank of France devised by John Law
Colour photography: the first known permanent colour photograph was taken by James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) [122]
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_inventions_and_discoveries

The average Englishman in the home he call his castle slips into his national costume, a shabby raincoat, patented by Chemist Charles Macintosh (Mac)from Glasgow, Scotland.
En-route to his office he strides along the English lane, surfaced by John Macadam (Tar Macadam)of Ayr, Scotland.
He drives an English car fitted with tyres invented by John Boyd Dunlop,(DUNLOP Tyres) Veterinary Surgeon of Dreghorn, Scotland.
At the office he receives the mail bearing adhesive stamps invented by John Chalmers, Bookseller and Printer of Dundee, Scotland.
During the day he uses the telephone invented by Alexander Graham Bell, born in Edinburgh, Scotland. At home in the evening his daughter pedals her bicycle invented by Kirkpatrick Macmillan, Blacksmith of Thornhill, Dumfriesshire, Scotland.
He watches the news on television, an invention of John Logie Baird of Helensburgh, Scotland, and hears an item about the U.S. Navy founded by John Paul Jones of Kirkbean, Scotland.
Nowhere can an Englishman turn to escape the ingenuity of the Scots.
He has by now been reminded too much of Scotland and in desperation he picks up the Bible, only to find that the first man mentioned in the good book is a Scot, King James VI, who authorized its translation.
He could take to drink but the Scots make the best in the world Whisky.
He could take a rifle and end it all, but the breech-loading rifle was invented by Captain Patrick Ferguson of Pitfours, Scotland.
If he escaped death, he could find himself on an operating table injected with penicillin, discovered by Sir Alexander Fleming of Darvel, Scotland, and given chloroform, an anesthetic discovered by Sir James Young Simpson, Obstetrician and Gynecologist of Bathgate, Scotland.
Out of the anesthetic he would find no comfort in learning that he was as safe as the Bank of England founded by William Paterson of Dumfries, Scotland.

Decided to go pro Scottish for once.

Posted using a computer, invented by an englishman.

Anyway, who cares
 
Improved seed drill - Jethro Tull[1]
Steam-driven ploughing engine - John Fowler[2]
Pioneer of selective breeding and artificial selection - Robert Bakewell[3]
Superphosphate or chemical fertilizer - John Bennet Lawes[4]
Pioneer of the development in dairy farming systems - Rex Paterson[5]
The first commercially successful light farm tractor - Dan Albone[6]
Water desalination process - Sir Francis Bacon[7]

[edit] Clock making

Anchor escapement - Robert Hooke[8]
First accurate atomic clock - Louis Essen[9]
Balance spring - Robert Hooke[10]
Balance wheel - Robert Hooke[11]
Co-axial escapement - George Daniels
Grasshopper escapement, H1, H2, H3 and H4 watches (a watch built to solve the longitude measurement problem)[12] - John Harrison
Gridiron pendulum - John Harrison[11]
Lever escapement The greatest single improvement ever applied to pocket watches - Thomas Mudge[11]
Marine chronometer - John Harrison[11]

[edit] Clothing manufacturing

Derby Rib (stocking manufacture) - Jedediah Strutt
Flying shuttle - John Kay
Mauveine, the first synthetic organic dye - William Henry Perkin
Power loom - Edmund Cartwright
Spinning frame - John Kay
Spinning jenny - James Hargreaves
Spinning mule - Samuel Crompton
Polyester - John Rex Whinfield
Sewing machine - Thomas Saint in 1790[13]
Water frame - Richard Arkwright
Stocking frame - William Lee
Warp-loom and Bobbinet - John Heathcoat

[edit] Communications

Uniform Penny Post, and postage stamp [14] - Sir Rowland Hill
Christmas card [15] - Sir Henry Cole
Valentines card [16] - Modern card 18th century England
Pencil - Cumbria, England
Mechanical pencil - Sampson Mordan and John Isaac Hawkins in 1822.[17]
Clockwork radio [18] - Trevor Baylis
The first Radio transmission using a Spark Transmitter, achieving a range of approximately 500 metres. - David E. Hughes
Electromagnetic induction & Faraday's law of induction Began as a series of experiments by Faraday that later became some of the first ever experiments in the discovery of radio waves and the development of radio - Michael Faraday [19]
Pioneer in the development of radio communication - William Eccles
Tin can telephone a device that conveyed sounds over an extended wire by mechanical vibrations - Robert Hooke 1667 [20]
The world's first radio station on the Isle of Wight
On December 2, 1922, in Sorbonne, France, Edwin Belin, an Englishman demonstrated a mechanical scanning device that was an early precursor to modern television
The first pocket sized handheld television, the MTV-1 - Sir Clive Sinclair
Pioneering work on the development of the long-lasting materials that made today's liquid crystal displays possible - Team headed by Sir Brynmor Jones and Developed by Scotsman George Gray and Englishman Ken Harrison In conjunction with the Royal Radar Establishment and the University of Hull [21]
The first public demonstration of television On 26 January 1926 at 22 Frith Street London - John Logie Baird
405-line television system was the first fully electronic television system used in regular broadcasting - Alan Blumlein
The world's first public broadcasts of high-definition television were made from Alexandra Palace, North London in 1936 - BBC Television Service
The first commercially successful electric telegraph - Sir Charles Wheatstone and Sir William Fothergill Cooke in 1837 [22][23][24]
Pioneer of stereo - Alan Blumlein [25]
Shorthand - Timothy Bright (1550/1-1615). Invented first modern shorthand
Pitman Shorthand - Isaac Pitman
Discovered the photoconductivity of the element selenium. This discovery led to the invention of photoelectric cells (solar panels), including those used in the earliest television systems - Willoughby Smith in 1873
Proposed the existence of the Kennelly–Heaviside layer, a layer of ionised gas that reflects radio waves around the Earth's curvature - Oliver Heaviside
Important improvements of the facsimile machine (Fax Machine) - Frederick Bakewell
The first SMS message was sent over the Vodafone GSM network in 1992 - Neil Papworth
Typewriter - First patent for a device similar to a typewriter granted to Henry Mill in 1714.[26]
the world's first automatic totalisator - George Julius
pioneer in the use of fiber optics in telecommunications - Charles K. Kao and George Hockham
The originator of the concept of geostationary satellites for the use of telecommunications relays - Arthur C Clarke
Teletext Information Service - The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

[edit] Computing

Analytical engine [27] - Sir Charles Babbage
ACE and Pilot ACE [28] - Alan Turing
ARM architecture The ARM CPU design is the microprocessor architecture of 98% of mobile phones and every smartphone.[29]
Bombe [28] - Alan Turing
Colossus computer [30] Colossus computers were the first electronic digital programmable computers. They used vacuum tubes and binary representation of numbers - Tommy Flowers
Difference engine [27] - Sir Charles Babbage
First programmer - Ada Lovelace
First Programming Language Analytical Engine ordercode - Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace
Boolean algebra, the basis for digital logic - George Boole
World Wide Web [31] - Sir Tim Berners-Lee
Developed HTTP and HTML - Tim Berners-Lee
Argo system the world's first electrically powered mechanical analogue computer (also called at the Argo Clock) - Arthur Pollen
Sumlock ANITA calculator the world's first all-electronic desktop calculator - Bell Punch Co
Sinclair Executive, the world's first small electronic pocket calculator - Sir Clive Sinclair
Osborne 1 The first commercially successful portable computer, the precursor to the Laptop computer - Adam Osborne
Designed what was the first laptop computer, the GRiD Compass in 1979 - Bill Moggridge
Heavily involved in the development of the Linux kernel - Andrew Morton & Alan Cox
Sinclair ZX80, ZX81 and ZX Spectrum - Sir Clive Sinclair
Flip-flop circuit, which became the basis of electronic memory (Random-access memory) in computers - William Eccles and F. W. Jordan
Universal Turing machine - The UTM model is considered to be the origin of the "stored program computer" used by John von Neumann in 1946 for his "Electronic Computing Instrument" that now bears von Neumann's name: the von Neumann architecture, also UTM is considered the first operating system - Alan Turing
The development of packet switching co-invented by British engineer Donald Davies and American Paul Baran - National Physical Laboratory, London England
The first person to conceptualise the Integrated Circuit - Geoffrey W.A. Dummer
The first modern computer Manchester Small-Scale Experimental Machine - (SSEM), nicknamed Baby. Was the world's first stored-program computer. Developed by Frederic Calland Williams & Tom Kilburn[32]
Williams tube - a cathode ray tube used to electronically store binary data (Can store roughly 500 to 1,000 bits of data) - Freddie Williams & Tom Kilburn
Manchester Mark 1 Historically significant computer because of its pioneering inclusion of index registers - Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn
Autocode regarded as the first ever computer compiler in 1952 for the Manchester Mark 1 computer - Alick Glennie
Developed the concept of microprogramming from the realisation that the Central Processing Unit (CPU) of a computer could be controlled by a miniature, highly specialised computer program in high-speed ROM - Maurice Wilkes in 1951
Ferranti Mark 1 - Also known as the Manchester Electronic Computer was the first computer to use the principles of early CPU design (Central processing unit) - Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn - Also the world's first successful commercially available general-purpose electronic computer.
The oldest known recordings of computer generated music were played by the Ferranti Mark 1 computer - Christopher Strachey
EDSAC was the first complete, fully functional computer to use the von Neumann architecture, the basis of every modern computer - Maurice Wilkes
EDSAC 2 the successor to the Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator or EDSAC. It was the first computer to have a microprogrammed (Microcode)control unit and a bit slice hardware architecture - Team headed by Maurice Wilkes
The first graphical computer game OXO on the EDSAC at Cambridge University - A.S. Douglas
The world's first computer game with 3D graphics - Elite Developed by David Braben and Ian Bell in 1984
Metrovick 950 was the first commercial transistor computer built in 1959 - Metropolitan-Vickers company
LEO Made history by running the first business application (payroll system) on an electronic computer in 1951 for J. Lyons and Co - Maurice Wilkes
Atlas Computer, it was arguably the world's first supercomputer and was the fastest computer in the world until the release of the American CDC 6600 Also This machine introduced many modern architectural concepts: spooling, interrupts, pipelining, interleaved memory, virtual memory and paging - Team headed by Tom Kilburn
The world's first web browser called WorldWideWeb that ran on the NeXTSTEP platform. It was later renamed Nexus to avoid confusion with the World Wide Web - Sir Tim Berners-Lee
Digital audio player (MP3 Player) - Kane Kramer
Touchpad Pointing device - First developed for Psion PLC's Psion MC 200/400/600/WORD Series in 1989
Co-Inventor of the world's first trackball device - developed by Tom Cranston, Fred Longstaff and Kenyon Taylor
The world's first handheld computer (Psion Organiser) - Psion PLC
The first rugged computer - Husky (computer)
First PC-compatible palmtop computer (Atari Portfolio) - Ian Cullimore
Denotational semantics - Christopher Strachey pioneer in programming language design
Wolfram's 2-state 3-symbol Turing machine - Stephen Wolfram

[edit] Criminology

DNA fingerprinting - Sir Alec Jeffreys[33]
The world's first national DNA database developed in 1995
Devised a method for classifying fingerprints that proved useful in forensic science - Francis Galton[34]
Iris recognition - John Daugman[35]
Chemist who developed the Marsh test for detecting arsenic poisoning - James Marsh[36]

[edit] Cryptography

Playfair cipher - Charles Wheatstone[24]
Bacon's cipher - Sir Francis Bacon
RSA cipher - Clifford ****s developed the RSA algorithm at GCHQ, approximately three years before it was independently developed by Rivest, Shamir and Adleman at MIT. The British government were not interested in using ****s' algorithm, so it was classified until 1998, when it was revealed that he had developed RSA before Rivest et al.[37]

[edit] Engineering

Adjustable spanner - Edwin Beard Budding
Cavity magnetron - John Randall and Harry Boot critical component for Microwave generation in Microwave ovens and high powered Radios (Radar)[38]
Carey Foster bridge - Carey Foster[39]
Electric transformer - Michael Faraday[40]
First coke-consuming blast furnace - Abraham Darby I[41]
First working universal joint - Robert Hooke
Produced the first commercial steel alloy in 1868 - Robert Forester Mushet
Crookes tube the first cathode ray tubes - William Crookes[41]
First compression ignition engine aka the Diesel Engine - Herbert Akroyd Stuart
First working steam pump - Thomas Savery in 1698[41]
Atmospheric steam engine - Thomas Newcomen in 1712[41][42]
Modified version of the Newcomen steam engine (Pickard engine) - James Pickard
Steam turbine - Charles Algernon Parsons[41]
Pendulum governor - Frederick Lanchester
High strength carbon fiber - Royal Aircraft Establishment in 1963 - Also on January 14, 1969 Carr Reinforcements (Stockport, England) wove the first carbon fiber fabric in the world
Contributed to the development of Radar - Scotsman Robert Watson-Watt and Englishman Arnold Frederic Wilkins
Disc brakes - Frederick W. Lanchester[41]
Internal combustion engine - Samuel Brown
Fourdrinier machine - Henry Fourdrinier
Microchip - Geoffrey W.A. Dummer
light-emitting diode (did not invent the first visible light, only theorised)- H. J. Round
Francis turbine - James B. Francis
Gas turbine - John Barber (engineer)
Two-stroke engine - Joseph Day
Pioneer of radio guidance systems - Archibald Low
Screw-cutting lathe - Henry Hindley
The first industrially practical screw-cutting lathe - Henry Maudslay
The first electrical measuring instrument, the electroscope - William Gilbert
Rectilinear Slide rule - William Oughtred[11]
Devised a standard for screw threads leading to its widespread acceptance - Joseph Whitworth
The Wimshurst machine is an Electrostatic generator for producing high voltages - James Wimshurst
Hot bulb engine or heavy oil engine - Herbert Akroyd Stuart
Hydraulic crane - William George Armstrong
Vacuum diode also known as a vacuum tube - John Ambrose Fleming
Linear motor is a multi-phase alternating current (AC) electric motor - Charles Wheatstone then improved by Eric Laithwaite[24]
Designed water and sewerage systems for over 30 cities across Europe - William Lindley
The Iron Bridge (1791), the first metal bridge of any kind - Abraham Darby III[41]
The world's first house powered with hydroelectricity - Cragside, Northumberland[citation needed]
Wind tunnel - Francis Herbert Wenham[11]

[edit] Food

Bangers and mash
Bird's Custard - Alfred Bird
Black Pudding
Branston Pickle
Brown Sauce (HP Sauce)
Bubble and Squeak
Cheddar cheese[43] - modern cheddar cheese manufacture Joseph Harding
Cornish pasty
Cottage pie
Cumberland sausage
Eccles cake
English mustard
Fish and Chips
Full English breakfast
Gravy
Haggis - Normally assumed to be of Scottish origin, but the first known written recipe for a dish of the name (as 'hagese'), made with offal and herbs, is in the verse cookbook Liber Cure Cocorum dating from around 1430 in Lancashire, North-West England.[44]
Ice cream [45] - Modern Ice cream 1718 England
Jellied eels
Kendal mint cake
Lancashire hotpot
Lincolnshire sausage
Marmite
Pancake [46] - Modern pancake, English culinary manuscript 1430
Parkin
Pasty
Piccalilli
Pork pie
Sandwich - John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich
Scotch egg - Invented by the famous London department store, Fortnum & Mason, in 1738.
Scouse
Shepherd's pie
Carbonated water, major and defining component of soft drinks [47] - Joseph Priestley
Spotted Dick
Steak and kidney pie
Sunday roast
Toad in the hole
Worcestershire sauce[48]
Yorkshire Pudding

[edit] Household appliances

Ballbarrow - James Dyson[49]
Perambulator - William Kent designed a baby carriage in 1733[50]
Collapsible baby buggy - Owen Maclaren
Domestic dishwasher - key modifications by William Howard Livens [51]
"Bagless" vacuum cleaner - James Dyson[49]
"Puffing Billy" - First powered vacuum cleaner - Hubert Cecil Booth[52][53][54]
Fire extinguisher - George William Manby[50]
Folding carton - Charles Henry Foyle
Lawn mower - Edwin Beard Budding[55]
Rubber band - Stephen Perry[56]
Daniell cell - John Frederic Daniell[57]
First incandescent light bulb - Joseph Wilson Swan in 1878.[58][59]
Tin can - Peter Durand
Light switch - Invented by John Holmes in 1884
Corkscrew - Reverend Samuell Henshall
Mouse trap - James Henry Atkinson
Postage stamp - Rowland Hill
Modern flushing toilet - John Harington[60]
The pay toilet - John Nevil Maskelyne, Maskelyne invented a lock for London toilets, which required a penny to operate, hence the euphemism "spend a penny".
Electric toaster - Rookes Evelyn Bell Crompton
Teasmade - Albert E. Richardson
Magnifying glass - Roger Bacon
Thermosiphon, which forms the basis of most modern central heating systems - Thomas Fowler
Automatic electric kettle - Russell Hobbs

[edit] Industrial processes

English crucible steel - Benjamin Huntsman
Steel production Bessemer process - Henry Bessemer
Hydraulic press - Joseph Bramah
Fourdrinier machine is the basis for most modern papermaking machines - Henry Fourdrinier
Parkesine, the first man-made plastic - Alexander Parkes
Portland cement - Joseph Aspdin
Sheffield plate - Thomas Boulsover
Water frame - Richard Arkwright
Stainless steel - Harry Brearley
Rubber Masticator - Thomas Han****
Power Loom - Edmund Cartwright
Parkes process - Alexander Parkes
Lead chamber process - John Roebuck
Development of the world's first commercially successful manufacture of high quality flat glass using the float glass process - Alastair Pilkington
Pioneers of the Industrial Revolution - Isambard Kingdom Brunel - Abraham Darby I - Abraham Darby II - Abraham Darby III - Robert Forester Mushet
The first commercial electroplating process - George Elkington
The Wilson Yarn Clearer - Peter Wilson

[edit] Medicine

First correct description of circulation of the blood - William Harvey[61]
Smallpox vaccine - Edward Jenner with his discovery is said to have "saved more lives (...) than were lost in all the wars of mankind since the beginning of recorded history."[62][63][64]
Surgical forceps - Stephen Hales[65]
Antisepsis in surgery - Joseph Lister
Artificial intraocular lens transplant surgery for cataract patients - Harold Ridley[66]
Clinical thermometer - Thomas Clifford Allbutt.[67]
Colour blindness first described by John Dalton in Extraordinary facts relating to the vision of colours [68]
Credited with discovering how to culture embryonic stem cells in 1981 - Martin Evans
Carried out ground breaking research on the use of penicillin in the treatment of venereal disease with the Scottish scientist Sir Alexander Fleming in London - Jack Suchet
First blood pressure measurement and first cardiac catheterisation-Stephen Hales[69]
Pioneer of anaesthesia and father of epidemiology for locating the source of cholera - John Snow (physician)[70]
pioneered the use of sodium cromoglycate as a remedy for asthma - Roger Altounyan[citation needed]
The first scientist to demonstrate that a cancer may be caused by an environmental carcinogen and one of the founders of orthopedy - Percivall Pott[71]
Performed the first successful blood transfusion - James Blundell[72]
Discovered the active ingredient of Aspirin - Edward Stone
Discovery of Protein crystallography - Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
The world’s first successful stem cell transplant[citation needed] and the first British Bone Marrow Transplant using bone marrow from a matching sibling - John Raymond Hobbs[73]
First typhoid vaccine - Almroth Wright[74]
Pioneer of the treatment of epilepsy - Edward Henry Sieveking
discovery of Nitrous oxide (entonox\"laughing gas") and its anaesthetic properties - Humphrey Davy[75]
Ophthalmoscope - conceived by Charles Babbage in 1847[65]
Computed Tomography (CT scanner) - Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield
Gray's Anatomy widely regarded as the first complete human anatomy textbook - Henry Gray
Discovered Parkinson's disease - James Parkinson[76]
General anaesthetic - Pionered by Scotsman James Young Simpson and Englishman John Snow[70]
Contributed to the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) - Sir Peter Mansfield
The development of in vitro fertilization - Patrick Christopher Steptoe and Robert Geoffrey Edwards[77]
First baby genetically selected to be free of a breast cancer - University College London
Viagra - Peter Dunn, Albert Wood, Dr Nicholas Terrett[citation needed]
Pioneer of modern nursing - Florence Nightingale
Acetylcholine - Henry Hallett Dale
EKG (underlying principles) - various[vague]
Vitamins and Tryptophan - Frederick Gowland Hopkins
diagnostic ultrasound - John J. Wild (although his research was conducted in US)
Identifying the mosquito as the carrier of malaria: Sir Ronald Ross (1857–1932) (born India, educated in England; mother English and father Scottish)
Earliest pharmacopoeia in English[78]
The hip replacement operation, in which a stainless steel stem and 22mm head fit into a polymer socket and both parts are fixed into position by PMMA cement - pioneered by John Charnley
Description of Hay Fever - John Bostock (physician) in 1819

[edit] Military

The tank - Developed and first used in combat by the British during World War I as a means to break the deadlock of trench warfare.
Fighter aircraft - The Vickers F.B.5 Gunbus of 1914 was the first of its kind.
Congreve rocket - William Congreve
High explosive squash head - Sir Charles Dennistoun Burney
Shrapnel shell - Henry Shrapnel
Harrier Jump Jet
Bullpup firearm configuration - Thorneycroft carbine
Puckle Gun - James Puckle
The side by side Boxlock action, AKA The double barreled shotgun - Anson and Deeley
Dreadnought Battleship
Bailey Bridge - Donald Bailey
Chobham armour
Livens Projector - William Howard Livens[79]
H2S radar (airborne radar to aid the bomb targeting) - Alan Blumlein
Bouncing bomb - Barnes Wallis
Safety fuse - William Bickford
Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knife - William Ewart Fairbairn and Eric A. Sykes
Armstrong Gun - Sir William Armstrong
Depth charge
Stun grenades - Invented by the SAS in the 60s.
Smokeless propellant to replace gunpowder with the use of Cordite - Frederick Abel
Torpedo - Robert Whitehead
The Whitworth rifle, considered the first sniper rifle. During the American Civil War the Whitworth rifle had been known to kill at ranges of about 800 yards - Sir Joseph Whitworth
The world's first practical underwater active sound detection apparatus, the ASDIC Active Sonar - Developed by Canadian physicist Robert William Boyle and English physicist Albert Beaumont Wood
The first self-powered machine gun Maxim gun - Sir Hiram Maxim, Although the Inventor is American, the Maxim gun was financed by Albert Vickers of Vickers Limited company and produced in Hatton Garden London
Steam catapult-Commander Colin C. Mitchell RNVR

[edit] Mining

Davy lamp - Humphry Davy
Geordie lamp - George Stephenson
Beam engine - Used for pumping water from mines

[edit] Musical instruments

Concertina - Charles Wheatstone[24]
Theatre organ - Robert Hope-Jones
English horn - A version of the Oboe
Logical bassoon, an electronically controlled version of the bassoon - Giles Brindley
Northumbrian smallpipes
Tuning fork - John Shore

[edit] Photography

Ambrotype - Frederick Scott Archer[80]
Calotype - William Fox Talbot[81]
Collodion process - Frederick Scott Archer[80]
Collodion-albumen process - Joseph Sidebotham in 1861
Stereoscope - Charles Wheatstone[23][24]
Thomas Wedgwood - pioneer of photography, devised the method to copy visible images chemically to permanent media.
Dry plate process also known as gelatine process, is the first economically successful durable photographic medium - Richard Leach Maddox
Kinemacolor was the first successful colour motion picture process, used commercially from 1908 to 1914 - George Albert Smith
cinematography - William Friese-Greene
Motion picture camera, the Kinetoscope - William Kennedy Laurie Dickson
The first movie projector, the Zoopraxiscope - Eadweard Muybridge
The first experimental film called "The Horse in Motion" in 1872 - Eadweard Muybridge

[edit] Publishing firsts

Oldest publisher and printer in the world (having been operating continuously since 1584): Cambridge University Press
first book printed in English: "The Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye" by Englishman William Caxton in 1475

[edit] Science

Modern atomic theory - Considered the father of modern chemistry, John Dalton's experiments with gases led to the development of what is called the modern atomic theory.[41][82]
Equals sign Robert Recorde, Welshman
Cell biology - Credit for the discovery of the first cells is given to Robert Hooke who described the microscopic compartments of cork cells in 1665[82]
Compound microscope with 30x magnification - Robert Hooke
Universal joint - Robert Hooke[citation needed]
Coggeshall slide rule - Henry Coggeshall
The Iris diaphragm - Robert Hooke
Correct theory of combustion - Robert Hooke
Partition chromatography - Richard Laurence Millington Synge and Archer J.P. Martin[83]
Arnold Frederic Wilkins - pioneer in the development of Radar
Atwood machine used for illustrating the law of uniformly accelerated motion - George Atwood
Marine Barometer - Robert Hooke[11]
Hooke's Law (equation describing elasticity) - Robert Hooke[11]
Electrical generator (dynamo) - Michael Faraday[40]
Faraday cage - Michael Faraday[40]
Magneto-optical effect - Michael Faraday[40]
Calculus - Sir Isaac Newton
Infrared radiation - discovery commonly attributed to William Herschel.
Holography - First developed by Dennis Gabor in Rugby, England. Improved by Nicholas J. Phillips who made it possible to record multi-colour reflection holograms
Discovery of the pion (pi-meson) - Cecil Frank Powell
Wheatstone bridge - Samuel Hunter Christie
Triple achromatic lens - Peter Dollond
Newtonian telescope - Sir Isaac Newton
Hawking radiation - Stephen Hawking
Demonstrated that electric circuits obey the law of the conservation of energy and that electricity is a form of energy First Law of Thermodynamics. Also the unit of energy, the Joule is named after him - James Prescott Joule
Micrometer - Sir William Gascoigne[citation needed]
the first bench micrometer that was capable of measuring to one ten thousandth of an inch - Henry Maudslay
Sinclair Executive, the world's first small electronic pocket calculator - Sir Clive Sinclair
Discovered the element argon - John Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh with Scotsman William Ramsay
Standard deviation - Francis Galton
Slide rule - William Oughtred [84]
Synthesis of coumarin, one of the first synthetic perfumes, and cinnamic acid via the Perkin reaction- William Henry Perkin
The Law of Gravity - Sir Isaac Newton
Newton's laws of motion - Sir Isaac Newton
Geological Timescale - Arthur Holmes[85]
Electromagnet - William Sturgeon in 1823.[82]
Helium - Norman Lockyer
Weather map [86] - Sir Francis Galton
Introduced the symbol for "is less than" and "is greater than" - Thomas Harriot 1630
Introduced the "×" symbol for multiplication as well as the abbreviations "sin" and "cos" for the sine and cosine functions - William Oughtred
Dew Point Hygrometer - John Frederic Daniell
Periodic Table - John Alexander Reina Newlands
Splitting the atom - John ****croft and Irish physicist Ernest Walton
Seismograph - John Milne
Discovery of oxygen gas (O2) - Joseph Priestley
Discovery of the Atom(nuclear model of) - Ernest Rutherford
Discovery of the Proton - Ernest Rutherford
Discovery of the Electron, isotopes and the inventor of the Mass spectrometer - J. J. Thomson
Discovery of the Neutron - James Chadwick
Discovery of Hydrogen - Henry Cavendish
Nuclear transfer - Is a form of cloning first put into practice by Ian Wilmut and Keith Campbell to clone Dolly the Sheep
Theory of Evolution - Charles Darwin

[edit] Astronomy

Discovery of the planet Uranus[87] and the moons Titania, Oberon, Enceladus, Mimas [88] by Sir William Herschel
Discovery of Triton[89] and the moons Hyperion, Ariel and Umbriel - William Lassell[90]
Planetarium - John Theophilus Desaguliers
Predicts the existence and location of Neptune from irregularities in the orbit of Uranus - John Couch Adams [91]
Important contributions to the development of radio astronomy - Bernard Lovell [92]
Newtonian telescope - Sir Isaac Newton [93]
Achromatic doublet lens - John Dollond [94]
Coining the phrase 'Big Bang' - Fred Hoyle [95]
First theorised existence of black holes, binary stars; invented torsion balance - John Michell[96]
Stephen Hawking - World-renowned theoretical physicist made many important contributions to the fields of cosmology and quantum gravity, especially in the context of black holes
Spiral galaxies - William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse [97]
Discovery of Halley's Comet - Edmond Halley [98]
Discovery of pulsars - Antony Hewish [99]
Discovery of Sunspots and was the first person to make a drawing of the Moon through a telescope - Thomas Harriot [100]
The Eddington limit, the natural limit to the luminosity of stars, or the radiation generated by accretion onto a compact object - Arthur Stanley Eddington [101]
Aperture synthesis, used for accurate location and imaging of weak radio sources in the field of Radio astronomy - Martin Ryle and Antony Hewish [102]

[edit] Chemistry

Dalton's law and Law of multiple proportions - John Dalton [103]
The structure of DNA and pioneering the field of molecular biology - co-developed by Francis Crick [104] and the American James Watson
DNA sequencing by chain termination - Frederick Sanger [105]
Discovery of introns in eukaryotic DNA and the mechanism of gene-splicing - Richard J. Roberts [106]
Discovey of Buckminsterfullerene - Sir Harry Kroto [107]
Discovery of thallium - William Crookes[41]
Discovered the structure of ferrocene - Geoffrey Wilkinson & others [108]
Discovers hydrogen as a colorless, odourless gas that burns and can form an explosive mixture with air - Henry Cavendish [109]
Proposes the law of octaves, a precursor to the Periodic Law - John Newlands [110]
Bragg's law and establish the field of X-ray crystallography, an important tool for elucidating the crystal structure of substances - William Henry Bragg and William Lawrence Bragg [111]
Introduces concept of atomic number to fix inadequacies of Mendeleev's periodic table, which had been based on atomic weight - Henry Moseley [112]
First isolation of sodium - Humphry Davy [113]
First isolation of potassium - Humphry Davy[41]
First isolation of boron - Humphry Davy[41]
First isolation of benzene, the first known aromatic hydrocarbon - Michael Faraday[114]
Publishes Opus Maius, which among other things, proposes an early form of the scientific method, and contains results of his experiments with gunpowder - Roger Bacon [115]
Publishes several Aristotelian commentaries, an early framework for the scientific method - Robert Grosseteste [116]
Baconian method, an early forerunner of the scientific method - Sir Francis Bacon[117]
The first discovery of aluminium - Sir Humphry Davy
Pioneer in early Solar Power - Weston cell - Edward Weston (chemist)[citation needed]
Proposes the concept of isotopes, elements with the same chemical properties may have differing atomic weights - Frederick Soddy[41]
The synthesising of xenon hexafluoroplatinate the first time to show that noble gases can form chemical compounds - Neil Bartlett
Callendar effect the theory that linked rising carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere to global temperature (Global warming) - Guy Stewart Callendar
Pioneer of the fuel cell - Francis Thomas Bacon[118]
Pioneer of meteorology by developing a nomenclature system for clouds in 1802 - Luke Howard[119]
Rayleigh scattering explains why the sky is blue, and predicted the existence of the surface waves - John Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh[120]

[edit] Sport

Football - The rules as we know them today were established in 1848 at Cambridge University, Sheffield F.C. is acknowledged by The Football Association and FIFA as the world's first and oldest football club.[121]
Rugby - William Webb Ellis
Cricket - the world's second-most popular sport can be traced back to the 13th century[122]
Tennis - widely known to have originated in England.[123]
Badminton - Modern rules of the game was launched in 1873 at the Badminton House after being imported from India by British soldiers.
Boxing - England played a key role in the evolution of modern boxing. Boxing was first accepted as an Olympic sport in Ancient Greece in 688 BC
Darts - a traditional pub game, the numbering layout was devised by Brian Gamlin
Table-Tennis - was invented on the dinner tables of Britain as an indoor version of tennis
Snooker - Invented by the British Army in India[124]
Ping pong - The game has its origins in England, in the 1880s
Bowls - has been traced to 13th century England[125]
Field hockey - the modern game grew from English public schools in the early 19th century
Netball - the sport emerged from early versions of women's basketball, at Madame Österberg's College in England during the late 1890s.[126]
Rounders - the game originates in England most likely from an older game known as stool ball
The Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race, the first race was in 1829 on the River Thames in London [127]
Thoroughbred Horseracing - Was first developed in 17th and 18th century England
Polo - its roots began in Persia as a training game for cavalry units, the formal codification of the rules of modern Polo as a sport were established in 19th century England
The format of Modern Olympics - William Penny Brookes
Modern Rock Climbing - Walter Parry Haskett Smith (1859–1946) is considered the Father of Rock Climbing.
The first Paralympic games competition were held in England in 1948 - Ludwig Guttmann[128]
oldest rowing competition in existence and oldest rowing race in the world: Doggett's Coat and Badge annual race on the Thames since 1715
oldest sporting competition in the world: The Antient Silver Arrow Archery competition known as the Scorton Arrow as it was originally held in Scorton , Yorkshire. It was first shot for in 1673.[129]
oldest cricket festival (and probably oldest sporting festival) in the world: Canterbury Cricket Week founded in 1842 [129]
Lonsdale belt: oldest boxing belt in the world[130]
oldest running race in the world - the Crick Run started in 1836 at rugby school

[edit] Transport
[edit] Aviation

Aeronautics and flight - George Cayley[131]
Jet engine - Sir Frank Whittle[132]
Steam Powered Flight with the Aerial Steam Carriage - John Stringfellow- The world's first powered flight took place at Chard in Somerset 55 years before the Wright brothers attempt at Kitty Hawk[133]
VTOL (Vertical Take-Off and Landing) fighter-bomber aircraft - Hawker P.1127, Designed by Sydney Camm[134]
The first commercial jet airliner (de Havilland Comet)[135]
Pioneer of parachute design - Robert ****ing
Pioneer of glider development & first well-documented human flight. He discovered and identified the four aerodynamic forces of flight - weight, lift, drag, and thrust. Modern airplane design is based on those discoveries including cambered wings. He is sometimes called the "Father of aviation" - George Cayley[131]
The first aircraft capable of supercruise - English Electric Lightning
Hale rockets, improved version of the Congreve rocket design that introduced Thrust vectoring - William Hale
The term airport - first used to describe the port city Southampton where boat planes landed in the nineteenth century

[edit] Railways

The first full scale railway steam locomotive was built in 1804 - Richard Trevithick[136]
Great Western Railway - Isambard Kingdom Brunel
Stockton and Darlington Railway the world's first operational steam passenger railway
First inter-city steam-powered railway - Liverpool and Manchester Railway

[edit] Locomotives

Blücher - George Stephenson
Puffing Billy -William Hedley
Locomotion No 1 - Robert Stephenson
Sans Pareil - Timothy Hackworth
Stourbridge Lion - Foster, Rastrick and Company
Stephenson's Rocket - George and Robert Stephenson
The Salamanca - Matthew Murray
Flying Scotsman- Sir Nigel Gresley[citation needed]

[edit] Other railway developments

Displacement lubricator, Ramsbottom safety valve, the water trough, the split piston ring - John Ramsbottom
Maglev (transport) rail system - Eric Laithwaite
World's oldest underground railway and the oldest rapid transit system. It was also the first underground railway to operate electric trains - London underground
Advanced Passenger Train(APT) was an experimental High Speed Train that introduced tilting - British Rail

[edit] Roads

Bowden cable - Frank Bowden
Cat's eye - Percy Shaw [137]
Hansom cab - Joseph Hansom
Seat belt - George Cayley[138]
Sinclair C5 - Sir Clive Sinclair
Inventor of tarmac - E. Purnell Hooley
Tension-spoke Wire wheels - George Cayley[131]
Belisha beacon - Leslie Hore-Belisha
ThrustSSC jet-propelled car holds the World Land Speed Record, it achieved a speed of 1,228 km/h (763 mph). The car was designed and built in England - ThrustSSC Project director Richard Noble, Designed by Ron Ayers, Glynne Bowsher, Jeremy Bliss and piloted by Andy Green
Lotus 25 Considered the first modern F1 race car designed for the 1962 Formula One season. It was a revolutionary design the first fully stressed monocoque chassis to appear in Formula One - Colin Chapman, Team Lotus
Horstmann suspension, tracked armoured fighting vehicle suspension - Sidney Horstmann
Steam fire engine - John Braithwaite
Safety bicycle - John Kemp Starley & Dan Albone
Penny-farthing - James Starley
First traffic lights installed (gas lamp) - Outside Houses of Parliament, London. December 10, 1868
First automatic traffic lights installed - Wolverhampton England. 1927
The oldest existing driving school and first formal driving tuition is the British School of Motoring, founded in 1910 in Peckham, London[139]

[edit] Sea

Plimsol line - Samuel Plimsoll
Hovercraft - Christopher ****erell
Lifeboat - Lionel Lukin
Resurgam - George Garrett
Transit (ship) - Richard Hall Gower
Submarine - Designed by Englishman William Bourne and built by Dutchman Cornelius Drebbel in 1620
SS Great Britain, the world's first steam-powered, screw propeller-driven passenger liner with an iron hull. Designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel and launched in 1843 it was at the time the largest ship afloat.
Turbinia, the first steam turbine powered steamship, designed by the engineer Sir Charles Algernon Parsons and built in Newcastle upon Tyne
Diving Equipment/Scuba Gear - Henry Fleuss
Diving bell - Edmund Halley
Sextant - John Bird
Octant (instrument) - Independently developed by Englishman John Hadley and the American Thomas Godfrey
Whirling speculum, This device can be seen as a precursor to the gyroscope - John Serson
Screw propeller - Francis Pettit Smith
The world's first patent for an underwater echo ranging device (Sonar) - Lewis Richardson
hydrophone Before the invention of Sonar convoy escort ships used them to detect U-boats, greatly lessening the effectiveness of the submarine - Research headed by Ernest Rutherford
Hydrofoil - John Isaac Thornycroft

[edit] Miscellaneous

Oldest police force in continuous operation: Marine Police Force founded in 1798 and now part of the Metropolitan Police Service
Oldest life insurance company in the world: Amicable Society for a Perpetual Assurance Office founded 1706
First Glee Club, founded in Harrow School in 1787.[140]
Oldest arts festival - Norwich 1772 [141]
Oldest music festival - The Three Choirs Festival
Oldest literary festival - The Cheltenham Literature Festival
Bayko - Charles Plimpton
Linoleum - Frederick Walton [142]
Meccano - Frank Hornby
Crossword puzzle - Arthur Wynne
Gas mask - (disputed) John Tyndall and others
Graphic telescope - Cornelius Varley
Steel-ribbed Umbrella - Samuel Fox
Plastic - Alexander Parkes
Plasticine - William Harbutt
Carbonated soft drink - Joseph Priestley
Friction Match - John Walker
Invented the rubber balloon - Michael Faraday
Earliest concept of a Metric system - John Wilkins
Edmondson railway ticket - Thomas Edmondson
The world's first Nature Reserve - Charles Waterton *Public Park - Joseph Paxton
Scouts - Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell
Spirograph - Denys Fisher
The Young Men's Christian Association YMCA was founded in London - George Williams (YMCA)
The Salvation Army, known for being one of the largest distributors of humanitarian aid - Methodist minister William Booth
Prime meridian - George Biddell Airy
Produced the first complete printed translation of the Bible into English - Myles Coverdale
Founder of the Bank of Scotland - John Holland
Venn diagram - John Venn
vulcanisation of rubber - Thomas Han****
Silicone - Frederick Kipping
Stamp collecting - John Edward Gray bought penny blacks on first day of issue in order to keep them

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