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Sir Benjamin Thompson, Count von Rumford

Image credit: National Portrait Gallery, London

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Born and raised in Massachusetts, Thompson arrived in England in 1776, where he conducted experiments with gunpowder. He served (1780–1781) as undersecretary of the colonies, and later entered the service of the elector of Bavaria. He was knighted in 1784 and in 1791 was created count of the Holy Roman Empire. Returning to England in 1795, Thompson introduced improvements for chimneys and fireplaces and invented the double boiler, and the kitchen range. He developed a more accurate theory of heat, claiming in a paper he presented to the Royal Society in 1798, that heat was produced by the motion of particles, contradicting the accepted caloric theory of heat. He founded the Royal Institution in London in 1799.

National Portrait Gallery, London

London

Title

Sir Benjamin Thompson, Count von Rumford

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 71.1 x W 58.4 cm

Accession number

1332

Acquisition method

Purchased, 1902

Work type

Painting

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National Portrait Gallery, London

St Martin’s Place, London, Greater London WC2H 0HE England

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