Abstract
I DO not intend to make this in any sense a report of the progress of our Institution during the last or any number of years. I shall not, therefore, give any account of the exceedingly good work done by Colonel Crompton and the active service corps of our Electrical Engineer Volunteers in South Africa. I shall not describe how we fêted our American cousins in England and France, or how they fêted us; nor what a wonderful success accompanied all that was attempted by us or by them or by M. Mascart and our French colleagues, although I cannot refrain from bearing my testimony to the great kindness of the Prince of Wales and the British Commission in so generously lending us the British Pavilion for our great reception, and giving us the use of one of its rooms for our office all the time of our visit to Paris.
Article PDF
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Electrical Engineering as a Trade and as a Science 1 . Nature 63, 41–47 (1900). https://doi.org/10.1038/063041a0
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/063041a0