- Thompson, John (American businessman)
The Chase Manhattan Corporation: …organized September 12, 1877, by John Thompson (1802–91), who named the bank in honour of the late U.S. Treasury secretary Salmon P. Chase. (Thompson had earlier helped found the First National Bank, a predecessor of Citibank and, later, CitiGroup.) Chase National’s growth was phenomenal, and by 1921 it had become…
- Thompson, John Griggs (American mathematician)
John Griggs Thompson is an American mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1970 for his work in group theory. In 2008 the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters awarded Thompson and Jacques Tits of France the Abel Prize for their “profound achievements in algebra and in particular for
- Thompson, Judith (Canadian author)
Canadian literature: Drama: The plays of Judith Thompson, which gain their shape from dreams and the effects of dreams, are visually exciting explorations of the evil force in the human subconscious (The Crackwalker, 1980; Lion in the Streets, 1990). In Billy Bishop Goes to War (1981), John Gray created a very…
- Thompson, Kay (American entertainer and writer)
Kay Thompson was an American entertainer and writer who was best known as the author of the highly popular Eloise books, featuring a comically endearing enfant terrible who bedeviled New York City’s Plaza Hotel. Thompson early displayed a considerable talent for the piano, and at the age of 16 she
- Thompson, Kenneth Lane (American computer scientist)
Kenneth Lane Thompson is an American computer scientist and cowinner of the 1983 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science. Thompson and the American computer scientist Dennis M. Ritchie were cited jointly for “their development of generic operating systems theory and specifically
- Thompson, Klay (American basketball player)
Golden State Warriors: …Achilles tendon) and All-Star wing Klay Thompson (torn anterior cruciate ligament) suffered injuries that typically take about a year to recover from, putting the future of the Warriors dynasty in doubt.
- Thompson, La Marcus (American inventor)
roller coaster: Coney Island amusement park: In 1884 inventor La Marcus Thompson, the “Father of the Gravity Ride,” had opened a 600-foot (183-metre) switchback railway at Coney Island. With a top speed of 6 miles (9 km) per hour, Thompson’s ride, called the Switchback Railway, was little more than a leisurely gravity-powered tour of…
- Thompson, Linda (British musician)
Richard Thompson: …a partnership with his wife, Linda Thompson (original name Linda Pettifer, later known as Linda Peters; b. 1948, Glasgow, Scotland). Their most notable albums together were I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight (1974) and Shoot Out the Lights (1982). The latter documents a marital relationship in the last…
- Thompson, Lucky (American musician)
Lucky Thompson was an American jazz musician, one of the most distinctive and creative bop-era tenor saxophonists, who in later years played soprano saxophone as well. Thompson played tenor saxophone in the early 1940s with Lionel Hampton, the Billy Eckstine band, and Count Basie before a highly
- Thompson, Lydia (British theatrical manager)
burlesque show: …company of English chorus girls, Lydia Thompson’s British Blondes, the burlesque show of the 19th century was patterned after the popular minstrel show. It consisted of three parts: first, a series of songs, coarsely humorous sketches or bits, and comic monologues usually by baggy-pants comics; second, the olio, an assortment…
- Thompson, Mark (British business executive)
Mark Thompson is a British business executive who served as director general of the BBC (2004–12) before becoming president and CEO of The New York Times Co. (2012–20). Thompson attended Stonyhurst College, a prestigious Jesuit Roman Catholic school in Lancashire. After graduating (1979) from
- Thompson, Mayo (American musician)
Pere Ubu: January 4, 1947), Mayo Thompson (b. February 26, 1944), Anton Fier (b. June 20, 1956, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.), and Eric Drew Feldman (b. April 16, 1955).
- Thompson, Mervyn (New Zealand author)
New Zealand literature: Drama: Mervyn Thompson wrote expressionist plays mixing elements of autobiography with social and political comment (O! Temperance! and First Return [both published 1974]). Greg McGee probed the surface of New Zealand’s “national game,” rugby, in the hugely successful Foreskin’s Lament (published 1981). Roger Hall wrote clever…
- Thompson, Paul (British musician)
Roxy Music: Ferry, Mackay, Eno, Manzanera, and Thompson. The band’s eponymous debut album, the nonalbum single “Virginia Plain” (both 1972), and the follow-up album For Your Pleasure (1973) were hits in Britain, as Roxy Music’s fully textured sound and lush instrumentation set it apart from mainstream rock. When Eno departed to pursue…
- Thompson, Randall (American composer)
Randall Thompson was a composer of great popularity in the United States, notable for his choral music. Thompson studied at Harvard University and later with the composer Ernest Bloch. He taught at a number of universities and colleges and was director of the Curtis Institute of Music, Philadelphia
- Thompson, Reginald Campbell (British archaeologist)
Nineveh: During 1929–32 R. Campbell Thompson excavated the temple of Nabu (Nebo) on behalf of the British Museum and discovered the site of the palace of Ashurnasirpal II. In 1931–32, together with M.E.L. (later Sir Max) Mallowan, Thompson for the first time dug a shaft from the top…
- Thompson, Richard (British musician)
Richard Thompson is an English guitarist, singer, and songwriter who earned critical acclaim with his masterful musicianship and darkly witty lyrics. Thompson’s career began in the late 1960s as a member of Fairport Convention, whose intermingling of traditional British folk songs, Bob Dylan
- Thompson, Sadie (fictional character)
Sadie Thompson, fictional character, the protagonist of the short story “Rain” (1921) by W. Somerset Maugham. Thompson is a lighthearted American prostitute who plies her trade in the South Seas and causes the downfall of Reverend Mr. Davidson, a fanatical missionary. The short story was adapted
- Thompson, Silvanus Phillips (British physicist and historian)
Silvanus Phillips Thompson was a British physicist and historian of science known for contributions in electrical machinery, optics, and X rays. He received both a B.A. (1869) and a D.Sc. (1878) from the University of London and was a popular teacher at University College, Bristol (1876–85), and at
- Thompson, Sir Benjamin, Count Von Rumford (American-British physicist)
Sir Benjamin Thompson, count von Rumford was an American-born British physicist, government administrator, and a founder of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, London. His investigations of heat overturned the theory that heat is a liquid form of matter and established the beginnings of the
- Thompson, Sir D’Arcy Wentworth (Scottish zoologist)
Sir D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson was a Scottish zoologist and classical scholar noted for his influential work On Growth and Form (1917, new ed. 1942). Thompson was educated at the Edinburgh Academy, the University of Edinburgh, and at Trinity College, Cambridge (1880–83). In 1884 he became professor
- Thompson, Sir H. S. M. (British agriculturalist)
ion-exchange reaction: Early history: …Society of England by agriculturist Sir H.S.M. Thompson and chemist J.T. Way, describing the phenomenon of ion exchange as it occurs in soils. In his paper, entitled “On the Power of Soils to Absorb Manure,” Way addressed himself to the question of how soluble fertilizers like potassium chloride were retained…
- Thompson, Sir Henry (British physician)
cremation: Modern cremations: …1874, when Queen Victoria’s surgeon, Sir Henry Thompson, published his influential book Cremation: The Treatment of the Body After Death. He also organized the Cremation Society of England in association with Anthony Trollope, Sir John Tenniel, the dukes of Bedford and Westminster, and other articulate critics of burial practices. Although…
- Thompson, Sir J Eric S (British anthropologist)
Sir J. Eric S. Thompson was a leading English ethnographer of the Mayan people. Thompson devoted his life to the study of Mayan culture and was able to extensively decipher early Mayan glyphs, determining that, contrary to prevailing belief, they contained historical as well as ritualistic and
- Thompson, Sir John (prime minister of Canada)
Sir John Thompson was a jurist and statesman who was premier of Canada from 1892 to 1894. Thompson was called to the bar in Nova Scotia in 1865 and appointed queen’s counsellor in 1879. He entered politics in 1877 as Liberal-Conservative member for Antigonish in the provincial legislature, becoming
- Thompson, Sir John Eric Sidney (British anthropologist)
Sir J. Eric S. Thompson was a leading English ethnographer of the Mayan people. Thompson devoted his life to the study of Mayan culture and was able to extensively decipher early Mayan glyphs, determining that, contrary to prevailing belief, they contained historical as well as ritualistic and
- Thompson, Sir John Sparrow David (prime minister of Canada)
Sir John Thompson was a jurist and statesman who was premier of Canada from 1892 to 1894. Thompson was called to the bar in Nova Scotia in 1865 and appointed queen’s counsellor in 1879. He entered politics in 1877 as Liberal-Conservative member for Antigonish in the provincial legislature, becoming
- Thompson, Smith (United States jurist)
Smith Thompson was an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1823–43). Thompson studied law under James Kent and was admitted to the bar in 1792. Two years later he married Sarah Livingston, thereby allying himself with the Jeffersonian Republicans of the anti-Burr faction in New
- Thompson, Stith (American folklorist)
myth: Folkloric: …their collections of folklore, and Stith Thompson, who is notable for his classification of folk literature, particularly his massive Motif-Index of Folk-Literature (1955). The Grimms shared Herder’s passion for the poetry and stories of the Volk. Their importance stems in part from the academic diligence and meticulousness that they brought…
- Thompson, Tessa (American actress and musician)
Tessa Thompson is an American actress and musician known for her dramatic sensibility in film and television. She is best known for her appearances in the films Selma (2014), Dear White People (2014), and Creed (2015) and in the television series Veronica Mars (2005–06) and Westworld (2016–22). She
- Thompson, Tessa Lynn (American actress and musician)
Tessa Thompson is an American actress and musician known for her dramatic sensibility in film and television. She is best known for her appearances in the films Selma (2014), Dear White People (2014), and Creed (2015) and in the television series Veronica Mars (2005–06) and Westworld (2016–22). She
- Thompson, Tiny (Canadian ice-hockey player)
Boston Bruins: …Shore, Aubrey (“Dit”) Clapper, and Cecil (“Tiny”) Thompson, among others. The Bruins took home two more Stanley Cups, after the 1938–39 and 1940–41 seasons, behind goal-keeping great Frank Brimsek. They returned to the Stanley Cup finals five more times between 1943 and 1958 but lost on each occasion.
- Thompson, Tommy (United States official)
Tommy Thompson is an American politician, who served as governor of Wisconsin (1987–2001) and as U.S. secretary of health and human services (2001–05) and who sought the Republican nomination for president in 2008. Thompson received a bachelor’s degree in political science (1963) and a law degree
- Thompson, Tommy George (United States official)
Tommy Thompson is an American politician, who served as governor of Wisconsin (1987–2001) and as U.S. secretary of health and human services (2001–05) and who sought the Republican nomination for president in 2008. Thompson received a bachelor’s degree in political science (1963) and a law degree
- Thompson, Wiley (American general)
Second Seminole War: General Wiley Thompson was assigned to oversee the removal of the Seminoles in 1834. After learning that they did not intend to leave Florida, he informed the Seminoles that President Jackson had authorized him to remove them by force if necessary. Osceola emerged as a leader…
- Thompson, William (British boxer)
Bendigo was an English bare-knuckle boxer who became a Methodist evangelist and who is one of the few athletes whose name is borne by a city—Bendigo in Victoria, Australia. His nickname apparently is a corruption of the Old Testament name Abednego. Thompson was one of triplets; the other two were
- Thompson, William Tappan (American humorist)
William Tappan Thompson was an American humorist remembered for his character sketches of Georgia–Florida backwoodsmen. Thompson was orphaned in his early teens, worked briefly on a Philadelphia newspaper, then worked as assistant to the secretary of the Florida territory. He moved to Georgia in
- Thompsonville (Iowa, United States)
Sioux City, city, seat (1856) of Woodbury county, northwestern Iowa, U.S. It lies on the Missouri River (bridged to South Sioux City, Nebraska) at the influx of the Big Sioux and Floyd rivers, where Iowa, South Dakota, and Nebraska meet. The former territory of Omaha, Sioux, and Oto peoples, the
- Thoms, William John (English antiquarian)
folk dance: William John Thoms and folkloristics: ) The English antiquarian William John Thoms (using the pseudonym Ambrose Merton) coined the English word folklore in August 1846, taking credit in a letter to the periodical The Athenaeum.
- Thomsen myotonia congenita (pathology)
myotonia: Myotonia congenita and myotonic muscular dystrophy are usually caused by a mutation or other abnormality in a gene known as CLCN1 (chloride channel 1, skeletal muscle). That gene normally produces a protein that controls chloride channels in skeletal muscle fibre cells. However,
- Thomsen’s disease (pathology)
myotonia: Myotonia congenita and myotonic muscular dystrophy are usually caused by a mutation or other abnormality in a gene known as CLCN1 (chloride channel 1, skeletal muscle). That gene normally produces a protein that controls chloride channels in skeletal muscle fibre cells. However,
- Thomsen, Christian Jürgensen (Danish archaeologist)
Christian Jürgensen Thomsen was a Danish archaeologist who deserves major credit for developing the three-part system of prehistory, naming the Stone, Bronze, and Iron ages for the successive stages of man’s technological development in Europe. His tripartite scheme brought the first semblance of
- Thomsen, Grímur (Icelandic poet)
Icelandic literature: The 19th century: The poet Grímur Thomsen was contemporary with but distinct from this group; his poetry was less lyrical but more austere and rugged, as Hemings flokkur Áslákssonar (1885; “The Story of Heming Aslakssonar”) exemplifies.
- Thomsen, Hans Peter Jörgen Julius (Danish chemist)
Julius Thomsen was a Danish chemist who determined the amount of heat evolved from or absorbed in a large number of chemical reactions. Thomsen held two teaching posts before he became professor of chemistry at the University of Copenhagen (1866–91). He verified Gustav Kirchhoff’s equation
- Thomsen, Julius (Danish chemist)
Julius Thomsen was a Danish chemist who determined the amount of heat evolved from or absorbed in a large number of chemical reactions. Thomsen held two teaching posts before he became professor of chemistry at the University of Copenhagen (1866–91). He verified Gustav Kirchhoff’s equation
- Thomsen, Vilhelm Ludvig Peter (Danish philologist)
Orhon inscriptions: …1893 by the Danish philologist Vilhelm Thomsen. They are on two large monuments, erected in ad 732 and 735 in honour of the Turkish prince Kül (d. 731) and his brother the emperor Bilge (d. 734), and are carved in a script used also for inscriptions found in Mongolia, Siberia,…
- Thomson atomic model (physics)
Thomson atomic model, earliest theoretical description of the inner structure of atoms, proposed about 1900 by William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) and strongly supported by Sir Joseph John Thomson, who had discovered (1897) the electron, a negatively charged part of every atom. Though several alternative
- Thomson coefficient (electronics)
thermoelectric power generator: Thomson effect: …τ is known as the Thomson coefficient.
- Thomson Corporation (Canadian company)
Thomson Corporation, Canadian publishing and information services company. Its specialty reporting covers the fields of law, business and finance, medicine, taxation, and accounting. Although it is a publicly traded company, much of the stock is controlled by descendants of Roy Thomson, who, in the
- Thomson cross section (physics)
radiation: Cross section and Compton scattering: …cross section is called the Thomson cross section, symbolized by the Greek letter sigma with subscript zero, σ0, and is equal to a numerical factor times the square of the term, electric charge squared divided by electron rest energy, or σ0 = (8π/3) (e2/mc2)2. When the photon energy is equal…
- Thomson effect (physics)
Thomson effect, the evolution or absorption of heat when electric current passes through a circuit composed of a single material that has a temperature difference along its length. This transfer of heat is superimposed on the common production of heat associated with the electrical resistance to
- Thomson Group (French corporation)
Technicolor, major French multimedia company and electronics manufacturer. The original company was formed in 1966 with the merger of Compagnie Française Thomson-Houston and Hotchkiss-Brandt, becoming known as Thomson-Brandt S.A. in 1972. Because its management was long dominated by career military
- Thomson model (physics)
Thomson atomic model, earliest theoretical description of the inner structure of atoms, proposed about 1900 by William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) and strongly supported by Sir Joseph John Thomson, who had discovered (1897) the electron, a negatively charged part of every atom. Though several alternative
- Thomson of Fleet, Roy Herbert Thomson, 1st Baron (British publisher)
Roy Herbert Thomson, 1st Baron Thomson was a Canadian-born British publisher, owner of The Times of London and other newspapers and communications media. Early in life Thomson worked as a clerk and salesman, later failed as a prairie farmer and supplier of motor parts, then sold radios successfully
- Thomson Reuters (Canadian company)
Thomson Reuters, Canadian information services company. Founded as the Reuters news agency in Great Britain in 1851, it became one of the leading newswire services in the world. Its headquarters are in Toronto. The agency was established by Paul Julius Reuter, a former bank clerk who in 1847 became
- Thomson S.A. (French corporation)
Technicolor, major French multimedia company and electronics manufacturer. The original company was formed in 1966 with the merger of Compagnie Française Thomson-Houston and Hotchkiss-Brandt, becoming known as Thomson-Brandt S.A. in 1972. Because its management was long dominated by career military
- Thomson’s gazelle (mammal)
gazelle: …three of the smaller species—Thomson’s gazelle, the red-fronted gazelle, and the Mongalla gazelle—have become the genus Eudorcas. The Gazella genus as traditionally defined includes eight species that occur only in Africa, five that occur only in Asia, and one species that occurs both in Africa and Asia. In the…
- Thomson’s theorem (fluid mechanics)
fluid mechanics: Potential flow: …were it not for the theorem, first proved by Thomson, that, in a body of fluid which is free of vorticity initially, the vorticity remains zero as the fluid moves. This theorem seems to open the door for relatively painless solutions to a great range of problems. Consider, for example,…
- Thomson, Alexander (British architect)
Western architecture: Great Britain: …the work of Alexander (“Greek”) Thomson, whose Caledonia Road Free Church (1856–57) is among the finest monuments of Neoclassical architecture in Scotland.
- Thomson, Charles (American politician)
Continental Congress: ” Charles Thomson of Pennsylvania was elected secretary and served in that office during the 15-year life of the Congress.
- Thomson, Earl J. (athlete)
Earl J. Thomson was a hurdler and versatile track athlete who held the world record for the 110-metre hurdles (1920–28). He was almost completely deaf from the 1940s. Thomson competed at Dartmouth College (New Hampshire) from 1916 to 1918 (graduated 1920), and then served two years in the Royal
- Thomson, Elihu (American electrical engineer and inventor)
Elihu Thomson was a U.S. electrical engineer and inventor whose discoveries in the field of alternating-current phenomena led to the development of successful alternating-current motors. He was also a founder of the U.S. electrical industry. Thomson left England for Philadelphia as a child and
- Thomson, George (Scottish publisher)
George Thomson was a Scottish amateur editor and publisher of Scottish folk songs, which he attempted to provide with semiclassical settings. Impressed by foreign vocalists’ renditions of Scottish folk songs at Edinburgh Musical Society concerts, Thomson determined to anthologize the songs in
- Thomson, George Julius Poulett (British geologist)
George Julius Poulett Scrope was an English geologist and political economist whose volcanic studies helped depose the Neptunist theory that all the world’s rocks were formed by sedimentation from the oceans. Originally surnamed Thomson, he assumed the surname Scrope in 1821 on his marriage to the
- Thomson, J Edgar (American engineer and businessman)
J. Edgar Thomson was an American civil engineer and president of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company who consolidated a network of railroad lines from Philadelphia to various cities in the Midwest and the South, extending as far as Chicago and Norfolk, Va. Thomson joined the Pennsylvania engineer
- Thomson, J.J. (British physicist)
J.J. Thomson was an English physicist who helped revolutionize the knowledge of atomic structure by his discovery of the electron (1897). He received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1906 and was knighted in 1908. Thomson was the son of a bookseller in a suburb of Manchester. When he was only 14, he
- Thomson, James (Scottish poet [1700–1748])
James Thomson was a Scottish poet whose best verse foreshadowed some of the attitudes of the Romantic movement. His poetry also gave expression to the achievements of Newtonian science and to an England reaching toward great political power based on commercial and maritime expansion. Educated at
- Thomson, James (Scottish poet [1834–1882])
James Thomson was a Scottish Victorian poet who is best remembered for his sombre, imaginative poem “The City of Dreadful Night,” a symbolic expression of his horror of urban dehumanization. Reared in an orphanage, Thomson entered the Royal Military Academy, Chelsea, became a regimental
- Thomson, James (Scottish engineer)
waterpower: …Fourneyron’s design, notably those of James Thomson (about 1851) and James B. Francis (1855), using radial flow inward. Water turbines, used originally for direct mechanical drive for irrigation, now are used almost exclusively to generate electric power. See also hydroelectric power.
- Thomson, James (American biologist)
James Thomson is an American biologist who was among the first to isolate human embryonic stem cells and the first to transform human skin cells into stem cells. Thomson grew up in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park. At the University of Illinois, from which he graduated in 1981 with a bachelor’s
- Thomson, James Alexander (American biologist)
James Thomson is an American biologist who was among the first to isolate human embryonic stem cells and the first to transform human skin cells into stem cells. Thomson grew up in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park. At the University of Illinois, from which he graduated in 1981 with a bachelor’s
- Thomson, John (British photographer)
history of photography: Landscape and architectural documentation: …a retinue of equipment bearers); John Thomson produced a descriptive record of life and landscape in China; and French photographer Maxime Du Camp traveled to Egypt with Gustave Flaubert on a government commission to record landscape and monuments.
- Thomson, John Edgar (American engineer and businessman)
J. Edgar Thomson was an American civil engineer and president of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company who consolidated a network of railroad lines from Philadelphia to various cities in the Midwest and the South, extending as far as Chicago and Norfolk, Va. Thomson joined the Pennsylvania engineer
- Thomson, John G. (American mathematician)
algebra: New challenges and perspectives: …two Americans, Walter Feit and John G. Thomson, who proved an old conjecture of the British mathematician William Burnside, namely, that the order of noncommutative finite simple groups is always even. Their proof was long and involved, but it reinforced the belief that a full classification of finite simple groups…
- Thomson, John Turnbull (British explorer)
Mount Aspiring: …and named by the explorer-surveyor John Turnbull Thomson in 1857, the peak was first scaled in 1909 by Major Bernard Head. It became the central feature of the 1,109-square-mile (2,872-square-kilometre) Mount Aspiring National Park, created in 1964 and extending south from Haast Pass to Fiordland National Park.
- Thomson, Joseph (British explorer)
Joseph Thomson was a Scottish geologist, naturalist, and explorer who was the first European to enter several regions of eastern Africa and whose writings are outstanding contributions to geographical knowledge, exceptional for their careful records and surveys. Thomson’s gazelle (Eudorcas
- Thomson, Judith Jarvis (American philosopher)
Trolley problem: …such by the American philosopher Judith Jarvis Thomson, whose essay “Killing, Letting Die, and the Trolley Problem” (1976) spawned a vast academic literature on the topic. The problem immediately suggested a broader application of the doctrine of double effect beyond the morality of abortion, a common context of modern discussions…
- Thomson, Lily Chloe Ninette (English actress)
Lily James is an English screen and stage actress whose supporting role (2012–15) in the television series Downton Abbey launched her career. She was soon garnering lead parts in such big-screen movies as Disney’s live-action Cinderella (2015) as well as the Jane Austen parody Pride and Prejudice
- Thomson, Peter (Australian golfer)
Peter Thomson was an Australian golfer who won the British Open five times and who was the first Australian to win that tournament. Thomson won the British Open in 1954, 1955, 1956, 1958, and 1965, matching the number of wins by John Henry Taylor and James Braid and exceeded only by Harry Vardon,
- Thomson, Peter William (Australian golfer)
Peter Thomson was an Australian golfer who won the British Open five times and who was the first Australian to win that tournament. Thomson won the British Open in 1954, 1955, 1956, 1958, and 1965, matching the number of wins by John Henry Taylor and James Braid and exceeded only by Harry Vardon,
- Thomson, Robert (Australian journalist and editor)
Robert Thomson is an Australian journalist, newspaper editor, and executive who became the first non-British editor (2002–08) of The Times of London. He later served as managing editor (2008–13) of The Wall Street Journal before becoming CEO (2013– ) of News Corporation. Thomson was the son of a
- Thomson, Robert William (Scottish engineer and entrepreneur)
Robert William Thomson was a Scottish engineer and entrepreneur, known as the inventor of the pneumatic tire. Thomson was the son of the owner of a woollen mill and was sent at age 14 to Charleston, South Carolina, U.S., to live with an uncle and learn the merchant’s trade. Two years later he
- Thomson, Roy Herbert (British publisher)
Roy Herbert Thomson, 1st Baron Thomson was a Canadian-born British publisher, owner of The Times of London and other newspapers and communications media. Early in life Thomson worked as a clerk and salesman, later failed as a prairie farmer and supplier of motor parts, then sold radios successfully
- Thomson, Roy Herbert Thomson, 1st Baron (British publisher)
Roy Herbert Thomson, 1st Baron Thomson was a Canadian-born British publisher, owner of The Times of London and other newspapers and communications media. Early in life Thomson worked as a clerk and salesman, later failed as a prairie farmer and supplier of motor parts, then sold radios successfully
- Thomson, Sir C. Wyville (Scottish naturalist)
Sir C. Wyville Thomson was a Scottish naturalist who was one of the first marine biologists to describe life in the ocean depths. After studying medicine at the University of Edinburgh, Thomson lectured in botany at the University of Aberdeen (1850–51) and Marischal College (1851–52) but
- Thomson, Sir Charles Wyville (Scottish naturalist)
Sir C. Wyville Thomson was a Scottish naturalist who was one of the first marine biologists to describe life in the ocean depths. After studying medicine at the University of Edinburgh, Thomson lectured in botany at the University of Aberdeen (1850–51) and Marischal College (1851–52) but
- Thomson, Sir George Paget (English physicist)
Sir George Paget Thomson was an English physicist who was the joint recipient, with Clinton J. Davisson of the United States, of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1937 for demonstrating that electrons undergo diffraction, a behaviour peculiar to waves that is widely exploited in determining the atomic
- Thomson, Sir John Arthur (Scottish naturalist)
Sir John Arthur Thomson was a Scottish naturalist whose clearly written books on biology and attempts to correlate science and religion led to wider public awareness of progress in the biological sciences. A professor of natural history at the University of Aberdeen (1899–1930), Thomson
- Thomson, Sir Joseph John (British physicist)
J.J. Thomson was an English physicist who helped revolutionize the knowledge of atomic structure by his discovery of the electron (1897). He received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1906 and was knighted in 1908. Thomson was the son of a bookseller in a suburb of Manchester. When he was only 14, he
- Thomson, Sir William (Scottish engineer, mathematician, and physicist)
William Thomson, Baron Kelvin was a Scottish engineer, mathematician, and physicist who profoundly influenced the scientific thought of his generation. Thomson, who was knighted and raised to the peerage in recognition of his work in engineering and physics, was foremost among the small group of
- Thomson, Thomas (Scottish chemist)
law of definite proportions: …findings, but the Scottish chemist Thomas Thomson confirmed some of them and wrote in his article “Chemistry” in the Supplement to the Encyclopædia Britannica (1801) that Proust had definitely proved “metals are not capable of indefinite degrees of oxidation.” The principle was then concretely formulated by the English chemist John…
- Thomson, Thomas John (Canadian painter)
Tom Thomson was a landscape painter devoted to the Canadian wilderness. Encouraged by fellow designers in a Toronto commercial-art firm, Thomson began to paint about 1911. In 1913 he and his colleagues (including A.Y. Jackson and J.E.H. MacDonald) went to Algonquin Provincial Park to paint. After
- Thomson, Tom (Canadian painter)
Tom Thomson was a landscape painter devoted to the Canadian wilderness. Encouraged by fellow designers in a Toronto commercial-art firm, Thomson began to paint about 1911. In 1913 he and his colleagues (including A.Y. Jackson and J.E.H. MacDonald) went to Algonquin Provincial Park to paint. After
- Thomson, Virgil (American musician)
Virgil Thomson was an American composer, conductor, and music critic whose forward-looking ideas stimulated new lines of thought among contemporary musicians. Thomson studied at Harvard University and later in Paris with Nadia Boulanger, a noted teacher of musical composition. There he was
- Thomson-Brandt (French corporation)
Technicolor, major French multimedia company and electronics manufacturer. The original company was formed in 1966 with the merger of Compagnie Française Thomson-Houston and Hotchkiss-Brandt, becoming known as Thomson-Brandt S.A. in 1972. Because its management was long dominated by career military
- thomsonite (mineral)
thomsonite, rare mineral in the zeolite family, similar to natrolite
- Thon Buri (district, Thailand)
Thon Buri, section of Metropolitan Bangkok, Thailand’s capital and largest city. Located on the west bank of the Chao Phraya River, Thon Buri was formerly a separate city and changwat (province) from Bangkok proper, across the river, to which it was linked by three bridges. Thon Buri city was the
- Thonburi (district, Thailand)
Thon Buri, section of Metropolitan Bangkok, Thailand’s capital and largest city. Located on the west bank of the Chao Phraya River, Thon Buri was formerly a separate city and changwat (province) from Bangkok proper, across the river, to which it was linked by three bridges. Thon Buri city was the
- Thonet, Michael (Austrian furniture maker)
Michael Thonet was a German-Austrian pioneer in the industrialization of furniture manufacture. His experiments in the production of bentwood furniture widely influenced both contemporary and modern styles and his functional and exquisitely designed chairs are still being manufactured. A humble
- thong drill (tool)
hand tool: Drilling and boring tools: Such a strap, or thong, drill could be applied to drilling either with an abrasive or with a tool point hafted onto the end of the stick. The upper end of the shaft required a pad or socket (drill pad) in which it could rotate freely.