Sir Leonard Bairstow, Commander of the Order of the British Empire, Federal Reserve System, Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society was a son of Uriah Bairstow, a wealthy Halifax, West Yorkshire man and keen mathematician.
Education
As a boy, Leonard went to Queens Road and Moorside Council Schools before going to which he attended briefly before going to the Council Secondary School - then known as the Higher Grade School. A scholarship took him to the Royal College of Science where he secured a Whitworth Scholarship which enabled him to carry out research into explosion of gases.
Career
Born in 1880 in Halifax, Bairstow is best remembered for his work in aviation and for Bairstow"s method for arbitrarily finding the roots of polynomials. He then went to the National Physical Laboratory at Bushy Park where ultimately he became head of aeroplane research work. He made a major analytical contribution to the report of the R101 inquiry, which sought to discover how the airship disaster occurred.
He held the Zaharoff Chair of Aviation at Imperial College London from 1920-1949 and became Professor Sir Leonard Bairstow.
Foreign a time his assistant there was Beatrice Mabel Cave-Browne-Cave, a pioneer in the mathematics of aeronautics.
Membership
Royal Society]
He became a member of the Royal Society of London and the Royal Aeronautical Society.