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The filtration of public water-supplies / Third edition, revised and enlarged. cover

The filtration of public water-supplies / Third edition, revised and enlarged.

Chapter 5: ACKNOWLEDGMENT.
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About This Book

This book presents a practical, engineering-focused treatment of water filtration for municipal supplies, combining historical perspective, design principles, and operational guidance. It explains types of filters, construction of beds and underdrains, selection and grading of sands and gravels, rates of filtration, head loss, and mechanisms for regulating flow. Procedures for cleaning, sand-washing, and intermittent operation are described alongside theoretical and bacteriological considerations that bear on efficiency. Methods for measuring and removing turbidity and color, the effects of suspended mud, coagulation practices, and numerous design examples and appendices illustrate how to plan, build, and maintain effective filtration works.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT.

I wish to acknowledge my deep obligation to the large number of European engineers, directors, and superintendents of water-works, and to the health officers, chemists, bacteriologists, and other officials who have kindly aided me in studying the filtration-works in their respective cities, and who have repeatedly furnished me with valuable information, statistics, plans, and reports.

To mention all of them would be impossible, but I wish particularly to mention Major-General Scott, Water-examiner of London; Mr. Mansergh, Member of the Royal Commission on the Water-supply of the Metropolis; Mr. Bryan, Engineer of the East London Water Company; and Mr. Wilson, Manager of the Middlesborough Water-works, who have favored me with much valuable information.

In Holland and Belgium I am under special obligations to Messrs. Van Hasselt and Kemna, Directors of the water companies at Amsterdam and Antwerp respectively; to Director Stang of the Hague Water-works; to Dr. Van’t Hoff, Superintendent of the Rotterdam filters; and to my friend H. P. N. Halbertsma, who, as consulting engineer, has built many of the Dutch water-works.

In Germany I must mention Profs. Frühling, at Dresden, and Flügge, at Breslau; Andreas Meyer, City Engineer of Hamburg; and the Directors of water-works, Beer at Berlin, Dieckmann at Magdeburg, Nau at Chemnitz, and Jockmann at Liegnitz, as well as the Superintendent Engineers Schroeder at Hamburg, Debusmann at Breslau, and Anklamm and Piefke at Berlin, the latter the distinguished head of the Stralau works, the first and most widely known upon the Continent of Europe.

I have to acknowledge my obligation to City Engineer Sechner at Budapest, and to the Assistant Engineer in charge of water-works, Kajlinger; to City Engineer Peters and City Chemist Bertschinger at Zürich; and to Assistant Engineer Regnard of the Compagnie Générale des Eaux at Paris.

On this side of the Atlantic also I am indebted to Hiram F. Mills, C.E., under whose direction I had the privilege of conducting for nearly five years the Lawrence experiments on filtration; to Profs. Sedgwick and Drown for the numerous suggestions and friendly criticisms, and to the latter for kindly reading the proof of this volume; to Mr. G. W. Fuller for full information in regard to the more recent Lawrence results; to Mr. H. W. Clark for the laborious examination of the large number of samples of sands used in actual filters and mentioned in this volume; and to Mr. Desmond FitzGerald for unpublished information in regard to the results of his valuable experiments on filtration at the Chestnut Hill Reservoir, Boston.

Allen Hazen. 

Boston, April, 1895.