Henrik Gerner (1742–1787) was a Danish naval officer who specialised in shipbuilding and naval architecture. His interests as an entrepreneurial engineer led to unsinkable gun platforms, horse-driven dredging machines, and desalination equipment for Orient-bound trading ships.
The greatgrandson of the bishop of the same name, Henrik Gerner was born on 5 July 1742 in Copenhagen and baptised in Holmen Church[1][Note 1] and married in the same church on Christmas Eve 1773, Henrik Gerner became a volunteer cadet at the naval academy in 1755, sailing to the West Indies in the frigate Christianborg before becoming a full cadet the next year.
Gerner graduated from the Naval Cadet Academy in Copenhagen as a junior lieutenant in 1763, where he was already interested in the art and science of shipbuilding, and in 1764 sailed with the frigate Falster to Russia and Sweden, receiving expenses for the studies of ships, ships' carpentry, and the ironworkings for anchors and cannon. In 1765 he was promoted to senior lieutenant and joined Prins Friderich in 1766.
He was a close colleague of Ernst Wilhelm Stibolt and they obtained junior positions in the Construction Commission[Note 2] They were in England together studying ship building from 1768, and promotion for Gerner to Kaptain Lieutenant came in 1770. After a shorter spell in France, continuing his studies, Gerner was recalled to Denmark in 1772 and given the post of fabrikmester at Holmen and full membership of the Construction Commission. After further promotion he became a member, in 1776, of the Commission on Naval Defence and that same year was instrumental in founding the Ship Construction School.[2]
Some 117 ships of a variety of types and sizes are recorded [3][Note 3] as designed and built by Gerner, including 18 ships-of-the-line and 11 frigates.
Floating Battery No.1, (1787), an unsinkable platform heavily armed with 24-pound cannon survived the Battle of Copenhagen (1801) but was decommissioned the following year.
Dredging machine. In 1783 a novel machine for dredging the harbours and creeks excited public imagination. Prior to Gerner's new invention powered by horses, the clearing of mud and silt from the channels was a very labour-intensive project in order to allow ships to be hauled up and their bottoms scraped and cleaned.[5]
The Gerner Medal "for the naval cadet who showed the best insight and understanding of the science of seafaring, especially mathematics" was first presented in 1792. Its history was later associated with the sword of honour. Both honours are still available today - see da: Gerners Medalje. One hundred years after Henrik Gerner's death, a 72-page appreciation of his works and character was published in memoriam.[6]
The street Gernersgade in Copenhagen was named for Gerner in 1869.Henrik Gerners Vej in Birkerød is on the other hand name for his great-grandfather.
Two ships of the twentieth century Danish navy have borne his name
Submarine depot ship Henrik Gerner (1928–1943) scuttled, with another 31 vessels, in August 1943 in Copenhagen harbour to prevent being forcibly taken by German forces.[7]
^This same reference notes that the epitaph and gravestone have misreported his year of birth!
^The Construction Commission, first formed in 1739, had a remit to examine all technical drawings and associated documents of the fleet's ships., and to act as forum for the development of young naval officers, thus ensuring a certain continuity and training for future chief designers.(orlogbasenArchived 2022-05-21 at the Wayback Machine)
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