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TAYLOR, GEORGE AUGUSTINE (1872-1928), artist, journalist, and
inventor, |
was born at Sydney in 1872. He first became known as an artist, and was a
member of the Sydney Bohemian set in the 1890s, whose doings he was afterwards
to record in his Those Were the Days, a volume of reminiscences published
in 1918. He contributed drawings to the Bulletin, Worker,
Sunday Times, Referee, and London Punch, but later became
interested in aviation and radio, and did some remarkable work in connexion with
them. He experimented with a motorless aeroplane, in November 1909 constructed
one of full size, and rose into the air and manoeuvred it (Sydney Morning
Herald, 7 December 1909, p. 3). Much gliding had of course been done in
America and Europe many years before this, but the principle and design of
Taylor's machine appear to have anticipated the types being used in Europe more
than 10 years later. In wireless Taylor did some excellent pioneer work. He had
been experimenting for a long time, and in 1909 had had sufficient success to be
invited to join the Australian military forces as an intelligence officer in
connexion with aeronautics and wireless. In 1910 and 1911 he succeeded in
communicating from one part of a railway train to another, and in exchanging
messages between trains running at full speed. He had founded the aerial league
in 1909 and the wireless institute in 1911. It was largely on account of his
representations that the first government wireless station was erected in
Australia. He did some interesting experimental work in connexion with locating
sound by wireless, which proved useful in the 1914-18 war when methods of
locating submarines had to be devised. Taylor visited Europe in 1922 and studied
broadcasting developments. On his return at the end of that year he formed an
association for developing wireless in Australia and was elected its president.
At a conference of wireless experts called together by the Commonwealth
government in May 1923 Taylor was elected chairman, and did valuable work in
framing broadcasting regulations for Australia. He was also a pioneer in the
transmission of sketches by wireless, both in black and white and in colour.
Taylor had for many years before this conducted a successful monthly trade
journal called Building, of which he was proprietor and editor. Gradually
other magazines were added, including the Australasian Engineer, the
Soldier, the Commonwealth Home, and the Radio Journal of
Australasia. He also published two volumes of popular verse, Songs for
Soldiers (1913), and Just Jingles (1922), and some small volumes of
sketches and stories. He was much interested in town-planning, and published in
1914 Town Planning for Australia and in 1918 Town Planning with
Common-sense. He died as the result of an accident on 20 January 1928
leaving a widow. In 1929 a gift of £1100 was made to the university of Sydney by
the G. A. Taylor memorial committee to found a lectureship in aviation or
aeronautical engineering in his memory.
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