Herbert Eisner
Herbert Eisner | |
---|---|
Born | Herbert Sigmund Eisner 23 June 1921 Berlin, Weimar Republic |
Died | 28 June 2011 Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England | (aged 90)
Occupation | British Army soldier |
Nationality | British-German |
Alma mater | University of Nottingham |
Children | David Eisner |
Herbert Sigmund Eisner (23 June 1921 – 28 June 2011) [1] was a British-German scientist whose work led to high-expansion fire fighting foam. He was also a playwright.
Early life[]
He was born in Berlin.
His maternal grandfather knew the composer Richard Strauss and had founded Germany's first department store, the Grand Bazaar, in Frankfurt. His mother was a Wagnerian singer who holidayed with the playwright Bertolt Brecht. The family lived near the Tiergarten (Animal Garden) in central Berlin, and as a result often saw Joseph Goebbels walking to work. His aunt was Lotte H. Eisner, a German-French film critic, notably of German Expressionism, and a friend Leni Riefenstahl, the film director.
In 1936 he was sent to Buxton College, a boys' grammar school in Derbyshire. His parents left Berlin in 1939 and moved to London. When war broke out he was sent to the Isle of Man, with future members of the Amadeus Quartet. He joined the British Army, taking the surname Evans, and was sent to Kerala where he repaired tanks, becoming a Staff Sergeant.
He later read Physics at University College, Nottingham (the University of Nottingham).
Career[]
He worked for most of his life at the Safety in Mines Research Establishment (SMRE) in north-west Derbyshire until 1981.
Fire-fighting foam[]
In 1956 he carried out work on high-expansion foam to extinguish fires, which would lead directly to foam manufactured as a fire extinguishing agent. In 1964 Walter Kidde & Company (now called Kidde) bought the patents for high expansion foam.
Author[]
In the 1960s he wrote radio plays for BBC Radio 4 (the Home Service) and, in 1974 published a children's book, The Monster Plant
Personal life[]
In 1948 he married Gisela Spanglet, who came to Britain aged 13 with the Kindertransport, having met her at university in Nottingham. In 1951 they moved to Buxton. They had two daughters and two sons. One of the sons is a violinist with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, who married , a novelist and classical music journalist and writer, in 1989. One of his daughters became a GP, and another son, David Eisner, became a Professor of Physiology at the University of Manchester and married another physiologist, Susan Wray. Herbert Eisner died in Harrogate in 2011.
References[]
- ^ Telegraph obituary, 28 Jul 2011, Herbert Eisner retrieved January 2018
External links[]
- 1921 births
- 2011 deaths
- Alumni of the University of Nottingham
- History of firefighting
- German emigrants to the United Kingdom
- People educated at Buxton College
- People from Buxton
- Scientists from Berlin
- English male dramatists and playwrights
- 20th-century English dramatists and playwrights
- Writers from Berlin
- British Army soldiers
- British Army personnel of World War II
- 20th-century English male writers