British Horological Institute
The British Horological Institute (also known as the BHI) is the representative body of the horological industry in the United Kingdom.
History
The BHI was founded in 1858 by a small group of clockmakers.[1] One of these included Edward Daniel Johnson, who was one of the founders. Their aim was to unify the British horological industry and trades in the face of large numbers of imports of clocks and watches from abroad. The Institute was an immediate success and within a year it had founded its own museum and library; it also began to offer evening classes in clock- and watch-making.[1]
The journal of the Institute is the Horological Journal, which has been published since September 1858.[2]
The BHI today
The current premises of the BHI are at Upton Hall in Nottinghamshire, England. Its primary role is that of education, providing a standardised set of examinations for training horologists.[1] It also maintains a list of members whom it considers sufficiently qualified to repair clocks and watches, and who adhere to a strict code of practice. It publishes the Horological Journal monthly, the oldest continuously-published technical journal in the country. It contains details of anything and everything relevant to horology and horologists.
Membership
The Institute offers a number of different kinds of membership. These include:
- Ordinary Membership
- Any individual with an interest in horology may subscribe as a member
- Full Membership
- Full membership is open to graduate members with a sufficient degree of professional experience as a clockmaker. Full members may append the letters "MBHI" to their name.
- Fellowship
- In order to become a fellow of the BHI, one must make a contribution to the field of horology deemed to be of exceptional value. (This has not always been the case; it was significantly easier to gain fellowship in later half of the twentieth century.)
Fellows of the BHI may append the letters "FBHI" to their name.
A full explanation of the different grades of membership is available on the BHI's own website.
The BHI Library
The Library of the BHI is one of very few existing specialised libraries dealing primarily with horology. It is open to researchers by appointment, and its holding includes a number of rare documents, papers, letters and books, particularly dealing with the high points of British horology in the 18th and early 19th century, but its catalogue contains comparatively few titles published in the last several decades.
BHI Gold Medal
The institute's gold medal for an outstanding contribution to horology has been awarded to:
- 1928 Frank Watson Dyson - Astronomer Royal who introduced Greenwich pips.
- 1930 Charles Édouard Guillaume - developed Invar and Elinvar
- 1946 Frank Hope-Jones (1867–1950) - developed electrical timekeeping, including Synchronome system
- 1947 Rupert Gould - restored John Harrison's chronometer
- 1947 Warren Alvin Marrison - developed the quartz crystal clock
- 1948 Harold Spencer Jones - Astronomer Royal
- 1957 John Harwood - invented the self-winding wristwatch
- 1981 George Daniels
See also
- Upton Hall - the headquarters of the BHI.
References
- 1 2 3 BHI official website
- ↑ "Horological Journal". British Horological Institute. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
External links
- Home page of the BHI
- Virtual tour of Upton Hall, the current headquarters of the BHI
- The BHI's list of recommended repairers
- BHI Library
- BBC interview with Viscount Alan Midleton, curator of the British Horological Institute
- BBC pictures of the British Horological Institute