Education
Born on 8 June 1832 in Wanstead, Essex, Bright was educated at Merchant Taylors" School.
Born on 8 June 1832 in Wanstead, Essex, Bright was educated at Merchant Taylors" School.
At fifteen he became a clerk for the Electric Telegraph Company and as his talent for electrical engineering became evident, he was appointed engineer to the Magnetic Telegraph Company in 1852. In that role he supervised the laying of lines in the British Isles, including in 1853 the first cable between Scotland and Ireland, from Portpatrick to Donaghadee, when he was just 21. This work, and the successful laying of other submarine cables, suggested to others that it might be possible to lay a cable across the Atlantic from Ireland to North America.
Joining with Cyrus West Field and John Watkins Brett, who controlled the Newfoundland Telegraph Company, Bright helped organize the Atlantic Telegraph Company in 1856 to develop a transatlantic cable, with himself as engineer-in-chief
Wildman Whitehouse soon joined them as chief electrician. Samuel Canning supported the effort on board HMS Agamemnon.
Bright was knighted in Dublin just a few days later. Though widely hailed as the wonder of the age, the 1858 cable failed after only about a month of fitful service, a victim of hasty manufacture and the excessive signaling voltages used by Whitehouse.
Sir Charles Bright emerged from the debacle with his reputation largely intact and went on to supervise the laying of successful cables in the Mediterranean, the Persian Gulf, and the Caribbean.
He also served as a consultant on renewed efforts to span the Atlantic, which in 1866 resulted not only in the completion of the first lasting transatlantic cable, but in the recovery and completion of a cable that had snapped during laying in 1865. They were strong advocates of establishing a unified system of electrical units, and a number of the proposals they made in a paper presented to the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1861 were later taken up by the British Association Committee on Electrical Standards and formed the foundations of the system of ohms, amps, and volts still in use today. From 1865 to 1868 Bright was Liberal Member of Parliament for Greenwich and in 1887 he was elected president of the Society of Telegraphy Engineers and Electricians (later the Institution of Electrical Engineers).
Bright died on 3 May 1888, at Abbey Wood, near London.
Charles Tilston Bright"s son, also Charles Bright (1863-1937), followed in his father"s footsteps. In addition to cable engineering he was a pioneer in the use of radio as a communication device on both ships and planes.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1895. He was knighted in 1919.
19th United Kingdom Parliament.