In this
site we will try to clear up the mist of confusion in the naming of
the technology and the products that evolved from it and its
standards of excellence.

Sir
Christopher Cockerel invented the Hovercraft and this is his
story;
Sir Christopher Sydney Cockerell (June
4, 1910 – June 1, 1999) was a British engineer,
inventor of the
hovercraft. Cockerell was born in Cambridge, England, in a house
called "Wayside" in Cavendish Avenue, where his father, Sir Sydney
Cockerell, was curator of the Fitzwilliam Museum. He was educated at
Gresham's School, Holt, Norfolk. He then studied engineering at
Peterhouse, Cambridge. His father, sometime private secretary to Sir
William Morris and from 1908 to 1937 Director of the Fitzwilliam
Museum, Cambridge.

Cockerell

The Cockerels were a talented family.
The sons of Sydney John Cockerell, a London coal merchant, and Alice
neé Bennett, the daughter of a City Watchmaker, Sir Sydney’s elder
brother, Theodore, was a biologist, his younger brother, Douglas,
and eminent bookbinder; while Douglas’s son Sydney Maurice
(‘Sandy’), two years Christopher’s senior and also a bookbinder, was
a celebrated and innovative designer of marbled papers.
In his youth he was always tinkering
and inventing, much to the dismay of his father, whose interests
were literary, not mechanical.
He began his career working for the
Marconi company in 1935 where he received three dozen patents,
and got married soon afterwards. He worked on radar systems during
the
Second World War. His great invention, the
hovercraft, first saw the light of day in 1953. The idea was not
an immediate success, and he was forced to sell personal possessions
in order to finance his research. By 1959, a prototype craft was
crossing the English Channel between Dover and Calais. Cockerell was
knighted in 1969 for his services to engineering.
The theory behind one of the most
successful inventions of the 20th century, the
Hovercraft, was originally tested in 1955 using an empty cat food
tin inside a coffee tin, an industrial air blower and a pair of
kitchen scales.
Christopher Cockerell was initially
testing out the idea that it was possible to produce a cushion of
air between the bottom of the tins and the surface of the scales.
Once he had established that this was possible he decided to
experiment with more sophisticated models. Although his first tests
were carried out on dry land his main aim was to prove that drag or
friction between boats and water could be substantially reduced if
the ‘craft’ floated on an air cushion. And so the ‘hovercraft’ came
in to being. Indeed Cockerell came up with the word too, which was
recently chosen to represent 1959 in the 100 words, which
encapsulate the 20th century for the millennium edition
of the Collins English Dictionary.

Despite an interest in the arts,
Christopher read Engineering at Peterhouse, Cambridge. After
Cambridge he worked for the Radio Research Company until 1935 and
then for the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company from 1935 until
1951.
He had an enormous capacity for
invention and his father, despite reservations (he once described
his son as ‘no better than a garage hand’), put up the money for his
early patents. (When Sir Sydney died in 1962, aged 94, some
obituaries of this great museum director and manuscript collector,
friend of Bernard Shaw and T.E. Lawrence, literary executor of
Thomas hardy, called him simply ‘grandfather of the hovercraft’).
During the war years Cockerell worked
with an elite team at Marconi to develop radar, a development which
Churchill believed had a significant effect on the outcome of the
Second World War, and Cockerell believed to be one of his greatest
achievements. Whilst at Marconi Cockerell patented 36 of his ideas.
Cockerell left Marconi in 1950, and
with a legacy left by his beloved wife Margaret’s father, he and
Margaret were able to purchase a small boatyard in Norfolk. This
never seemed to make money and Cockerell’s mind turned back to
earlier ideas.
He decided to use larger models on
water. Initial experiments convinced Cockerell that boats could be
made to float on a cushion of air, thus reducing the effect of the
water drag. After many trials he successfully designed a craft which
proved his ideas were correct. He was not surprised. The modified
punt he used had a special pump to blow high-pressure air down under
and around the rim of the craft. A strong rubber curtain retained
most of the air, hence creating lift.
Cockerell had set up a company,
Ripplecraft, to develop his ideas further and in 1955 he eventually
convinced the Ministry of Supply to back his project. He had a hard
time trying to convince the military: the Admiralty said it was a
plane not a boat; the RAF said it was a boat not a plane; and the
Army were ‘plain not interested’. The irony is that it has been the
Marines who have taken the hovercraft most seriously, with over 100
giant craft now in use in America and 250 in the Soviet Union, many
used in recent conflicts.

Cockerell and
helper testing model concept
In these early days Cockerell’s idea
was patented and immediately put on the secret list. Nothing
happened and Cockerell became increasingly agitated. Eventually, in
1958, after declassification, the National Research Development
Council (NRDC) funded the design and construction of SR.N1 – the
world’s first man-carrying amphibious hovercraft.
Saunders Roe, the flying boat firm at
Cowes on the Isle of Wight, were given the contract, and the firm,
under Cockerell’s guidance, worked avidly on the 20ft craft dubbed
the ‘flying saucer’.
Ahead of schedule on 31st
May 1959, the seven-ton craft flew, only eight months after the
commencement of design work. But it was not until 11th
June that she made her first public appearance in front of the
world’s press. Such was the interest in this new form of transport
that the press refused to leave until she was demonstrated in the
water.
Within weeks, on 25th July
she made a crossing of the English Channel, from Calais to Dover,
with Cockerell aboard as human ballast, on the 50th
anniversary of the first aeroplane crossing of the Channel.
Cockerell’s dream had become a reality. Since then hovercraft
carried over 80 million people and 12 million cars across the
Channel and were in continuous service for over 30 years before
their retirement in October 2000.
Besides hovercraft he is attributed
with the invention of wave power in the late 1970s, hovertrains and
sidewall hovercraft (catamarans). Although Cockerell disagreed with
the way the NRDC proceeded with hovercraft production, and in 1966
resigned from the board of Hovercraft Development, today hovercraft
are enjoying a renaissance. Cheaper, quieter diesel engines, new
construction materials and advanced skirt design mean that a
hovercraft today is the same price as one 30 years ago. With
developing countries having the greatest need for hovercraft, with
shallows, coral reefs, mud flats, no ports and unprepared beaches,
hovercraft are coming in to their own
On the last weekend in May 1999 the
hovercraft industry launched Hovershow ’99 – the biggest show since
1966. Visitors were impressed by how the hovercraft has become a
viable and versatile workboat and export sales in the year 1998-9
reached £20m. Recent sales have been to Canada for coastguards, to
Lithuania as crew boats, to Hong Kong for fishery patrols, to
Nigeria for oil crew boats, to Finland for coastguards to be used on
ice and to Sri Lanka for military purposes. As Cockerell said,
‘Hovercraft will always be around – you can’t un-invent something!’
During the course of the weekend the
40th anniversary of the first flight of the hovercraft
was celebrated, and Cockerell sent his best wishes but was too frail
to attend. On the Monday a flypast was staged in his honour. He died
the following day, with more patents to his name than he had years.
The inventor of the hovercraft, died on the 40th anniversary of its
launch at Hythe in Hampshire.


