Safekipedia

James Watt

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Portrait of James Watt, the Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer, painted in 1792.

James Watt was a Scottish inventor, engineer, and chemist. He was born on January 30, 1736, and died on August 25, 1819. He is famous for improving the steam engine, which was first made by Thomas Newcomen in 1712. Watt’s big idea was to add a separate condenser. This stopped the engine from wasting energy and made it much stronger and cheaper to use.

While working at the University of Glasgow, Watt became very interested in steam engines. He saw that the old designs were not very good and wanted to make them better. His improvements helped change many industries and played a big role in the Industrial Revolution. This brought many changes to Great Britain and the world.

Statue of Watt(Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, by Francis Chantrey)

Watt tried to sell his invention but had money problems. Then he partnered with Matthew Boulton in 1775. Together, they formed the company Boulton and Watt. With this partnership, Watt became wealthy and kept inventing new things, but none were as important as his work on the steam engine.

Because of Watt’s work on measuring power, the unit of power called the watt was named after him. This unit is still used today to measure how much power a machine or device uses.

Biography

James Watt was born on 19 January 1736 in Greenock, Renfrewshire. His father was a shipwright and his mother came from a well-educated family. Watt liked mathematics when he was young but did not like Latin or Greek.

James Watt by John Partridge, after Sir William Beechey (1806)

After school, Watt worked with his father and then moved to Glasgow. There, he became a mathematical instrument maker. He fixed special instruments from Jamaica for the University of Glasgow. This helped him open a small workshop. He made and fixed tools like reflecting quadrants, scales, and barometers. Watt got married and had children. He kept working on inventions all his life.

Scientific studies and inventions

Watt and the kettle

A story says that James Watt got the idea for improving the steam engine after watching a kettle boil. The story says the steam pushing up the kettle’s lid showed Watt the power of steam. While this tale may not be true, it has some truth. Watt used a kettle in his experiments to learn more about heat and steam.

Watt did not invent the steam engine but made it much better. He improved an existing engine called the Newcomen engine by adding a separate part where the steam could cool down. This made the engine work much better.

James Eckford Lauder: James Watt and the Steam Engine: the Dawn of the Nineteenth Century, 1855

Early experiments with steam

Watt started testing steam after a friend suggested it. The Newcomen engine had been used for almost 50 years but did not work well. Watt built his own model and studied steam engines. He found that a big problem was that the engine wasted heat by heating and cooling its main part too often.

In 1765, Watt had an important idea while walking in a park. He thought of letting the steam cool in a separate area instead of inside the main engine. This saved heat and made the engine work better. He built a model of this idea the same year.

First engines

Original condenser by Watt (Science Museum)

In 1776, the first of Watt’s improved engines were installed to help pump water out of mines. These engines were very successful and Watt spent the next few years installing more of them, mostly in Cornwall.

Watt and his partner, Boulton, did not have their own factory at first. They relied on others to build the engine parts. Later, they opened their own factory called the Soho Foundry in 1795. This let them build the engines themselves.

Watt kept improving his engine. He added new features that made it work better and use less fuel. One big change was making the engine spin, which let it be used for many more tasks like grinding and weaving.

Copying machine

The ruin of Watt's cottage workshop at Kinneil House

Before 1780, copying letters or drawings was very hard. Watt developed a way to make copies by pressing ink from one sheet of paper onto another thin sheet. He worked hard to perfect this method and patented it in 1780. With his partner Boulton and another partner, James Keir, he formed a company called James Watt and Co. to sell the copying machine. It became very popular and was used in offices for many years.

Chemical experiments

Watt was also very interested in chemistry. In 1786, he saw an experiment in Paris that showed how to make a useful gas. He began experimenting with ways to make this gas, called chlorine, in Britain. Though he made some progress, others improved the process and it became successful without him.

Personality

Cylinder fragment of Watt's first operational engine at the Carron Works, Falkirk

Watt was known for being very clever and practical. He could understand science and also know how to use it to invent useful things. He was well-liked by many important people of his time and was part of a famous group called the Lunar Society of Birmingham.

Watt wasn’t very good at business, especially when it came to negotiating prices. He often worried about money and his health wasn’t always good. He retired in 1800 and passed his business on to his sons.

Soho Foundry

At first, Watt and Boulton only made plans for the engines and watched others build them. But over time, they started making more parts themselves. In 1795, they bought a new property to build a factory called the Soho Foundry. This factory opened in 1796 and became very important for making Watt’s engines.

Later years

Watt retired in 1800. After retiring, he kept inventing new things. He built machines to copy statues and helped with big engineering projects. He traveled to France and Germany and bought a home in Wales.

Watt passed away on 25 August 1819 at the age of 83. He was buried in Handsworth, near Birmingham.

Family

James Watt married his cousin Margaret Miller in 1764. They had two children together. Sadly, Margaret became very ill and passed away in 1773.

Later in 1776, James married again, this time to Ann MacGregor.

Freemasonry

James Watt joined a special group called a Masonic Lodge in Glasgow in 1763. This group does not exist today, but later another lodge was named after him in his hometown.

A Masonic Lodge was named after him in Glasgow – Lodge James Watt, No. 1215.

Murdoch's contributions

William Murdoch joined Boulton and Watt in 1777. He first worked in the pattern shop in Soho, but later helped build engines in Cornwall. He became a key part of the company and created many useful inventions.

Some believe that James Watt's advice against Murdoch's experiments with high-pressure steam for a steam road locomotive slowed its progress. Watt thought the boilers of that time would not be safe at higher pressures. In 1781, Watt got a patent for using the sun and planet gear with steam, and in 1784 for a steam locomotive. Some think Murdoch may have come up with these ideas first, but he never challenged the patent. Boulton and Watt kept using the sun and planet gear in their rotative engines even after another patent ended in 1794. Murdoch became a partner in the firm in 1810 and stayed until he retired at age 76.

pattern

Legacy

Further information: Industrial Revolution

James Watt improved the steam engine. His changes made it more useful and powerful. This helped begin the Industrial Revolution, a time when machines changed how people lived and worked.

Honours

James Watt received many honors during his lifetime. In 1784, he became a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. In 1806, he was given the honorary title of Doctor of Laws by the University of Glasgow.

The unit of power called the watt was named after him. It became an official measurement in 1889 and part of worldwide standards in 1960.

In 2009, it was announced that Watt would appear on a new £50 note from the Bank of England, along with another important industrialist. The note shows pictures of Watt's steam engine and a famous factory. Watt was also added to the Scottish Engineering Hall of Fame in 2011.

Memorials

James Watt was buried at St. Mary's Church in Birmingham. His grave is now part of the church building.

Many places honor Watt with statues and special buildings. In Greenock, where he was born, there is a library and streets named after him. Schools, universities, and a submarine are also named for him. His old workshop is kept safe and shown to visitors at the Science Museum. Statues of Watt can be found in cities like Glasgow, Edinburgh, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, and even in Budapest. One famous statue is in Westminster Abbey in London.

Patents

James Watt created six important inventions. His first invention, approved in 1769, saved steam in engines by using a separate container. His other inventions included new ways to copy letters, make engines move smoothly, improve steam engines, create new engine parts, and build better furnaces. All of his inventions were officially recorded between 1769 and 1785.

Images

A sculpted bust of the famous inventor James Watt, displayed in a museum.
An 18th-century sketch of a steam engine designed by Boulton & Watt, showing its various mechanical parts like the piston, connecting rod, and governor.
A historic steam engine from 1848, showcasing early industrial technology used in a German silver mine.
An old copying machine invented by James Watt & Co. around 1795.
A scientific paper showing diagrams of James Watt's innovative apparatus, highlighting important historical developments in engineering.
Historical letters written by the famous inventor James Watt, preserved in a museum archive.
Heathfield Hall in Handsworth, the historic home of the famous inventor James Watt.
Inside James Watt's historic workshop, now preserved in the Science Museum in London.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on James Watt, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.