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Encyclopedia > Tom Kilburn

Tom Kilburn (August 11, 1921 - January 17, 2001) was an English engineer. With Freddie Williams he invented the Williams-Kilburn Tube and the first stored-program computer in the world, the Manchester Mark I, while working at the Victoria University of Manchester.

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Comemorative plaque at the University of Manchester
Contents

Computer engineering

Kilburn was born in Dewsbury, Yorkshire and graduated in mathematics from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, pursuing a course compressed to two years following the outbreak of World War II. On graduation, he was recruited by C.P. Snow for unspecified secret work and found himself on a crash course in electronics before being posted to the Telecommunications Research Establishment in Malvern to work on Radar under F.C. Williams. In 1943 he married Irene Marsden and the couple went on to raise a son and a daughter.


Kilburn's wartime work inspired his enthusiasm for some form of electronic computer. The principle technical barrier to such an development at that time was the lack of any practical means of storage for data and instructions. Kilburn and Williams collaboratively developed a storage device based on a cathode ray tube and capable of storing a single bit. A patent was filed in 1946.


In December 1946, Williams took up the chair of electrotechnics at Manchester and recruited Kilburn on secondment from Malvern. The two developed their storage technology and, in 1948, Kilburn put it to a practical test in constructing the Small-Scale Experimental Machine which became the first stored-program computer to run a program, on June 21, 1948.


Kilburn received the degree of Ph.D. for his work at Manchester and had then anticipated a return to Malvern. However, Williams persuaded him to stay to work on the University's collaborative project developing the Ferranti Mark I, the world's first commercial computer. Over the next three decades, Kilburn led the development of a succession of innovative Manchester computers including Altlas and MU5.


Administration

Kilburn was instrumental in forming the Department of Computer Science in 1964 and served as Dean of the Faculty of Science (1970-1972) and pro-vice-chancellor of the university (1976-1979). He retired in 1981.


Personal

Kilburn habitually holidayed with his family in Blackpool but was always back in time for Manchester United F.C.'s first match of the football season.


He died in Manchester of pneumonia following abdominal surgery.


Honours

External links

  • Tom Kilburn Biography (1921-2001) (http://www.computer50.org/mark1/kilburn.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Tom Kilburn Summary (1685 words)
Kilburn was born on August 11, 1921, in the Yorkshire town of Dewsbury, England, where his father had risen from a clerk to general secretary at a large woolen firm.
Kilburn's penchant for mathematics--a subject he studied almost exclusively between the ages of fourteen and eighteen at the local grammar school (the rough equivalent of an American public high school), gained him entrance to Cambridge University as an open scholar in 1939, just at the onset of World War II.
Kilburn was the first research student at Manchester University in what was called the Computer Group, and he was named professor of computer engineering in the early 1960s, thus becoming the holder of the first formal academic position in computing in the United Kingdom.
Britain's Meritocracy (461 words)
Tom Kilburn, few of us knew until a newspaper report last month, is the man who headed the team which, at Manchester University in 1948, built the world's first-ever computer - yet another great British invention which revolutionised industry, technology and so much else.
Tom Kilburn was born into a humble Yorkshire family in 1922, his father being a railwayman.
Tom Kilburn ought to be a national hero - a name on everyone's lips, a great Briton whom young folk at school are taught about as a contributor to the long and glorious story of national achievement.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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