Michael Faraday (1791-1867)
Faraday is remembered best for his experiments with
electricity and magnetism. Michael Faraday had
very little education and was apprenticed to a
bookbinder, but after he heard the scientist Sir
Humphrey Davy speaking he wrote to him and got
a job as Sir Humphrey’s laboratory assistant.
In 1820, Hans Christian Oersted and Andre Marie
Ampere discovered that an electric current produces
a magnetic field. Faraday thought that this probably
meant that a magnetic field could be used to reverse
the process and produce an electric current. The
principle of induction which he thus discovered
led to the invention of the dynamo or generator,
which creates electricity. Faraday also developed
the theory that electricity has fields. The Town
Library has a copy of his classic book which was
based on a series of six lectures which he gave
to children, published in 1860 as The Chemical
History of a Candle.
Michael
Faraday. From Portraits of Men of Eminence, Vol.
1 p.147