Alexander Carlisle
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Alexander Montgomery Carlisle, PC (8 July 1854 – 6 March 1926) brother-in-law to Viscount Pirrie, was one of the men involved with designing the s in the shipbuilding company Harland and Wolff. His main area of responsibility was the ships' safety systems such as the watertight compartments and lifeboats. As a Privy Councillor, he was known as "The Right Honorable".


Biography

Carlisle was born in
Ballymena Ballymena ( ; from , meaning 'the middle townland') is a town in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It had a population of 31,205 people at the 2021 United Kingdom census, making it the List of localities in Northern Ireland by population, seven ...
, the eldest son of John Carlisle, director of the Royal Belfast Academical Institution. He studied at his father's school until he left at 16 to join the shipyard Harland and Wolff, starting out as an apprentice. It was during this period that he met Pirrie, who would later marry his sister Margaret in 1879. In 1884 he married Edith Wooster, an American 12 years his junior. The marriage produced a son and two daughters. Carlisle was one of the men who designed the three ships of the ''Olympic'' class: the '' Olympic'', the '' Titanic'' and the '' Britannic''. In the design of the ''Olympic'' and the ''Titanic'', he was responsible for the decor, the equipment and general arrangements, as well as the implementation of the davits system for the lifeboats. After 40 years at Harland and Wolff, Carlisle retired in 1910, becoming a shareholder in the Welin Davit & Engineering Company Ltd, the company that made the davits. While working on the liners, Carlisle had some minor disputes with Lord Pirrie over the number of lifeboats required for a vessel of this size. Pirrie, the chairman of Harland and Wolff, was satisfied that the number of lifeboats supplied more than met the board of trade regulations. Carlisle then retired and did not have anything more to do with shipbuilding. Thomas Andrews, Pirrie's nephew, was then made master ship builder. Contemporary documentaries claimed Carlisle retired in anger due to Pirrie not accepting his lifeboat recommendations, if his recommendations were accepted the overall death toll of the ''Titanic''’s sinking would be far lower. The ''Olympic''-class liners were the last ships that Carlisle was involved with. Carlisle was appointed to the
Privy Council of Ireland His or Her Majesty's Privy Council in Ireland, commonly called the Privy Council of Ireland, Irish Privy Council, or in earlier centuries the Irish Council, was the institution within the Dublin Castle administration which exercised formal executi ...
in 1907 by
Edward VII Edward VII (Albert Edward; 9 November 1841 – 6 May 1910) was King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions, and Emperor of India, from 22 January 1901 until Death and state funeral of Edward VII, his death in 1910. The second child ...
, serving in the House of Lords with Pirrie. Ultimately, he was expelled in 1920 during an intense debate over home-rule in Ireland.


See also

* Thomas Andrews (shipbuilder)


References


Further reading

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Carlsile, Alexander British naval architects 1854 births 1926 deaths Members of the Privy Council of Ireland