Career
Foreign his life history see Siebe Gorman. In the 1830s the Deane brothers asked Siebe to make a variation of their smoke helmet design for underwater use. Later they turned to him to produce more helmets for diving operations.
Expanding on improvements already made by another engineer, George Edwards, Siebe produced his own design.
A helmet fitted to a full length watertight canvas diving suit. The real success of the equipment was a valve in the helmet.
Colonel Charles Pasley, leader of the Royal Navy team that used Siebe"s suit on the wreck of the HMS Royal George suggested the helmet should be detachable from the corset, giving rise to the typical standard diving dress which revolutionised underwater civil engineering, underwater salvage, commercial diving and naval diving. He is commemorated by a blue plaque on his former home in Denmark Street, London.
Besides his contributions to diving he also invented:
a rotating water pump patented in 1828,
A paper making machine,
a Dial weighing scale,
an ice-making machine.
He died April 15, 1872 of chronic bronchitis, at his London home. He was buried at the West Norwood Cemetery.