grindell-matthews1


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Harry Grindell-Matthews  
"Death Ray"

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<http://www.forteantimes.com/features/profiles/193/grindell_death_ray_matthews.html>  
 October 2003

Grindell
'Death
Ray' Matthews

The Death Ray is ubiquitous from science
fiction to Conspiracy Theory.   
Dr David Clarke and Andy Roberts review the career of the man who
invented it... Or so he claimed

by

Dr
David Clarke and Andy Roberts

They called him Death Ray Matthews.
It wasnt a name he chose for himself, but of all the inventions
Harry Grindell Matthews was known for, it was the death ray for
which he was both feted and vilified. Was he a charismatic mixture
of visionary and charlatan, or an ignored and embittered inventor
who could have shortened both World Wars? Whatever the answer, his
story is a fascinating one, not least because it brings into sharp
focus how the British Government viewed fortean ideas in the early
years of the 20th century.

By any standards Harry Grindell
Matthews led a remarkable life. Born in 1880 at Winterbourne in
Gloucestershire, he was educated at the Merchant Venturers School
in Bristol before training as an electrical engineer. During the
Boer War he enlisted in the Baden-Powell South African
Constabulary and was wounded twice. On his return to Britain he
pursued his interest in the burgeoning electrical sciences on the
estate of Lord de la Warr at Bexhill-on-Sea. There he displayed a
natural aptitude for thinking outside the box and began to first
visualise and later produce a remarkable series of inventions.

For years Matthews had been fascinated
by the idea of communication over distances without the use of
wires and, following in Marconis footsteps, in 1911 he staged a
demonstration of radio telephony, transmitting a message from the
ground to B C Hucks flying two miles (3.2km) away and at 600 ft
(183m). Hucks himself deserves a footnote in the annals of
forteana as being the maverick flier who was sent to search the
Scottish lowlands for alleged German bases during the phantom
Zeppelin scares of the First World War.

His wireless telephone experiments
attracted a great deal of attention in high places and the Court
Circular of 5 July 1912 edition of The Times boldly stated,
Buckingham Palace, July 4th. Her Majesty this afternoon inspected
the wireless telephone invented by Mr. Grindell Matthews.
Contemporary photographs depict him chatting with the likes of
future Prime Minister Lloyd George. These early forays into the
world of invention were soon noticed by the War Office and the
Admiralty, forerunners of todays Ministry of Defence.

Fame and fortune awaited those who
could successfully develop inventions that could be useful to the
armed forces and Matthews saw a gap in the market through which he
could become wealthy and serve his country. How he went about that
process, however, casts doubt on his real motives and the
authenticity of all his inventions, most notably the death ray.

But to understand both Matthews
relationship with officialdom and the ultimate failure of the
death ray we need first to trace his steps between 1911 and 1924.

In the run-up to the First World War,
the Admiralty took an interest in his Aerophone device and
Matthews was invited to give a demonstration. As his patents at
that time were only provisional he demanded that no experts be
present. The Admiralty agreed and the demonstration went ahead.
But before it was completed Matthews assistant discovered four of
the invited observers had taken advantage of his absence from the
room to dismantle the apparatus, taking notes and sketches. In a
rage, Matthews cancelled the demonstration immediately and sent
everyone away, despite the protests of the Admiralty officials.

The press scented a scandal and was
immediately on Matthews side, national and provincial papers
trumpeting his cause, outraged at the intransigence of the
Admiralty. Public opinion was whipped into such frenzy that the
War Office had no option but to face up publicly both to the press
and the upstart who challenged them. A statement was issued via
The Daily Telegraph in which the War Office denied any tampering
and insisted that the Aerophone experiment had been a failure. As
the experiment had not even begun before the men from the ministry
began their tampering, Matthews sensed jealousy, if not a cover
up, was at work. Faced with an official denial, he had a change of
mind and in turn issued a statement retracting his claims and
downsizing the affair to a misunderstanding.

This bizarre incident was one of many
where Matthews would announce an invention only to fail at the
last minute, for whatever reason, to demonstrate it working
successfully. It was also the genesis of the medias love affair
with Matthews and his inventions. More importantly it marked the
drawing of a line in the sand between Matthews essentially
fortean ideas and the staid mechanistic traditions of the British
scientific establishment. Matthews then faded from the public gaze
until World War One.

Now, in 1914 and faced with the
prospect of a lengthy conflict, the British government was
desperate for innovations which would help them wage war against
Germany. Two inventions interested them greatly. The first was a
ray which would disable the Zeppelins, and the second was a ray
which could control unmanned craft. A reward of GBP25,000 was
offered to the person who came up with either. Matthews was
convinced he could provide the latter and claimed he had developed
a remote control system using cells containing selenium. After
testing his invention on Edgbaston Reservoir, he demonstrated it
to Admiralty officials at Richmond Parks Penn Pond. They were so
impressed that Matthews received his cheque for GBP25,000 the
following morning, a not inconsiderable sum of money in 1915.

Yet there was something not quite
right about this event. Although the remote control boat had been
proven to the Admiralty officials and a vast sum of money paid,
the idea never manifested as workable in practice. The Admiralty,
for whatever reason, chose not to pursue Matthews selenium
control system which, besides operating boats remotely, was
claimed to detonate explosives at a distance. Was this ignorance
and jealousy on behalf of the War Office or the first hints that
Matthews wasnt quite as genuine as he appeared? Again Matthews
lapsed into obscurity. He re-appeared briefly, yet significantly,
in 1921, breaking new ground by producing the worlds first
talking picture. This was a short interview with the explorer
Ernest Shackleton prior to his fatal attempt at circumnavigating
the Antarctic. This film is important because it proves Matthews,
despite the hype and ambiguity which often attended his
inventions, was not a charlatan, and was in many ways years ahead
of his time.

Unfortunately, the British film
industry told Matthews that talkies would never catch on. Just a
few years later, the Americans embraced the talking film and
revolutionised the movie industry for ever. Why was Grindell
Matthews invention not taken up? Why indeed?

The static carnage of World War One
had set inventors thinking about how the impasse of trench warfare
could be broken. All the talk was of some kind of ray which
could disable men and machines at great distances. Both H G Wells
and H Rider Haggard had produced fictional accounts of such a
death ray years earlier and as forteans know, whatever can be
imagined can be invented. Or can it?

Matthews turned his mind to the idea
of a possible death ray in the autumn of 1923. After reading news
reports of French airplanes dropping out of the sky over Germany,
he said: I realized that the Germans had found an invisible ray
that put the magnetos of the aircraft out of action. I
concentrated on efforts to discover what it was, and with the
electric ray now at my command I think I have succeeded. Select
journalists were given a demonstration of Matthews ray stopping
a motor cycle engine at a distance of 50 ft (15m). I am
confident, Matthews announced, that if I have facilities for
developing it I can stop aeroplanes in flight - indeed I believe
the ray is sufficiently powerful to destroy the air, to explode
powder magazines, and destroy anything on which it rests.

Thus the death ray was born in the
mind of the popular press. Matthews capitalised on his new-found
fame, being well aware that his stock was not particularly high
with the British government. So, rather than approach them
directly, he went to his old friends the press. They were only too
happy to help, and fanciful accounts of the death ray and what it
could do began to appear by late 1923. Bemused by Matthews sudden
re-appearance but fearful that the publicity he was enjoying would
lead to another nation bidding for the death ray, the War Office
was forced to act. Swallowing their pride and suspending their
disbelief, in February 1924 the Air Ministry offered Matthews the
opportunity to demonstrate his death ray to them. Matthews at
first ignored their advances, perhaps hoping the government would
simply accept his assertion that the ray did as he said.

When no such offer was forthcoming,
Matthews contacted the press with further dramatic claims and by
April 1924 the death ray  or more properly the idea of the death
ray  was world news. The London Star announced the invention as a
wonderful invisible ray which has turned into fact the dreams of
Wells fiction. And they hadn't even seen it yet! A wide-eyed
Star reporter was ushered into Matthews London laboratory and
shown a bowl of gunpowder being ignited by the ray. Matthews was
at pains to explain this was only the beginning, a small scale
demonstration of what could easily be the destruction of
ammunition dumps at huge distances or the destruction of aeroplane
engines in flight.

The scientific principles on which the
ray worked were glossed over by all concerned. Ionized air
carrying an electrical current was mentioned by some commentators,
others talked of exceptionally short radio waves. Matthews wasnt
saying and no-one appeared to be asking the right questions,
certainly not the press. To them the idea of a death ray was
enough.

Still the government wouldnt commit
itself and now Matthews was receiving offers from other countries,
notably big business concerns in France. By mid-May 1924 the press
was reporting, ...while the British government is interested it
is not willing to assist him in perfecting his experiments and he
is unable to resist the princely offer made by the Lyons firm.

Despite their initial interest, strong
doubts were beginning to be expressed by the Air Ministry. They
had been duped or conned many times before by inventors who made
great claims but failed to deliver the promised inventions. They
may even have been duped by Matthews himself. An internal
government memo coyly suggested that Matthews 1915 payment of
GBP25,000 was largely due to the influence of one particular lord
and was not entirely deserved. Worryingly, it also suggested that
enquiries should be instituted with the Birmingham Police records
as to Mr G Matthews past history.

A secret report looking into Matthews
claims and past history was apparently generated by the
Intelligence Services, but appears not to survive in the Public
Record Office at Kew. The old rivalries were at work again. But
Matthews had some support in the British government, notably from
Admiral Kerr who persuaded him not to sell his invention to
another power. Kerr claimed Matthews had given his word of honour
not to divulge the secret of the ray until I confer with members
of the British cabinet.

Matthews, now in negotiations to sell
his invention in France, was persuaded to return to England to
demonstrate his death ray to the three armed forces on 26 April
at noon, one oclock and 1.30pm. But the much vaunted death ray
demonstration was something of an anti-climax. After being ushered
into Matthews laboratory various leading government officials
were shown just two examples of the rays efficacy. An Osglim
light bulb was held in the path of the ray. When the ray was
switched on the bulb lit. A small motor mounted on a bench was
then started and immediately brought to a halt by the ray.

From these experiments  both easily
carried out using scientific techniques available at the time 
Matthews expected the full confidence of the British government.
He would be disappointed. Immediately following the demonstration,
a meeting was convened by the Air Ministry at 4.00pm to discuss
the death ray. Those present at the demonstration were now joined
by representatives from each of the armed forces. Each commented
on what they had seen in Matthews laboratory. The reports were
not positive. Major Wimperis from the Air Ministry stated: I was
rather surprised to find the inventor should imagine that one
would be impressed. The Admiraltys F Smith, also doubted what he
had seen, adding that Matthews assistants even appeared ignorant
of how the ray operated. Smith was also concerned that when he
suggested Matthews move the cycle motor from the lab bench to the
floor, Matthews did not like this suggestion and explained
further that he was in a great hurry.

Odd behaviour from a man who wished to
convince the British Government of one of the greatest inventions
yet seen. Smith sensed trickery was afoot, adding that he had been
visited by the mysterious Appleton  possibly an MI5 agent  who
claimed that Matthews had no scientific knowledge as such but
liked to experiment with all sorts of gadgets. This source
suggested that Matthews brought things up to a certain stage and
no further, he would then raise money on what he had achieved. In
short, a scientific confidence trickster.

Furthermore, Appleton claimed Matthews
was working the press, but had now lost control of it. The
explicit conclusion of this meeting was that the government did
not trust Matthews. Yet they were loathe to dismiss him completely
as long as even a small chance remained that he could be onto
something. No government wanted to turn down the death ray only
for it to turn up later in the arsenal of an enemy. Air Vice
Marshal Salmond wrote immediately to Matthews suggesting further,
more detailed demonstrations. Matthews replied that he could not
understand why the government would not accept the evidence he had
presented to them.

He had now lost patience with England
and was offering the ray to the French. Following this breakdown
of communications, events took a turn that was both dramatic and
ludicrous. Tuesday 27 May 1924 saw scenes which could have come
straight from an Ealing Comedy. The Daily Express summed up the
farce perfectly a day later with its front page headline
Melodramatic Death Ray Episodes. Their lead article opined:
Melodrama has seldom surpassed the heights which were reached in
yesterdays Death Ray episodes. Hurried legal action in the High
Court was followed by an unsuccessful motor-car chase, an air
journey by Mr. Grindell Matthews to Paris, a belated renewal of
conversations on this side of the channel, a reopening of
negotiations in France and a deluge of claims by rival inventors.
Beneath all was the undertone of tragedy suggested by the terrible
powers which are attributed to the ray.

At 10.40 that morning, the High Court
in London granted an injunction to Matthews financial backers,
restraining him from selling the rights to the death ray. At 10.45
am a blissfully unaware Matthews set off for Croydon aerodrome and
the lunchtime flight to Paris. Three minutes later, Major H
Wimperis arrived at Grindell Matthews laboratory, in an attempt
to further broker a deal. As they were leaving, Matthews
financial backers and their solicitor arrived bearing the recently
issued injunction. Finding Matthews gone, they hired the fastest
car available and sped to Croydon to prevent him leaving for
France. They roared on to the runway seconds too late and could
only watch in dismay as the small mail plane headed towards the
Channel.

Questioned later, E Gubbins, one of
Matthews investors, remained utterly persuaded of the rays
potency, saying, I am convinced that the ray is the most terrible
invention which has been created in recent years. It is of such a
nature that it will make wars impossible if held by Britain. Other
countries could not hope to combat a power armed with such a
weapon. Matthews, meanwhile, was again negotiating terms with the
French and was met at Le Bourget airfield by Eugene Royer prior to
a meeting that evening with the director of the Chantier du Rhone,
an important Lyons steel firm.

Meanwhile the deluge of publicity
which attended Grindell Matthews stand-off with the British
government brought a flood of other death ray inventors out of the
woodwork. At least 10 people, it seemed, had been harbouring death
rays in their private laboratories and sheds, and the War Office
was inundated with claimants. Several of these inventors were also
investigated by the War Office but, as with Matthews, none could
back their claims with meaningful demonstrations. The press were
incensed when they discovered Matthews was dealing with the
French, and wouldnt let the matter drop.

Once again, the government was forced
by popular opinion to make official statements and on 28 May
questions were asked in the House of Commons. Mr Leach, Under
Secretary for Air, was questioned by Commander Kenworthy, who
demanded to know what steps were being taken to prevent an
invention of the death rays magnitude from leaving the country.
Leach re-iterated the government's position, We are not in a
position to pass judgment on the value of this ray, because we
have not been allowed to make proper tests. Therefore whether
there is anything in it or not still remains unexplored. The
Departments have been placed in a difficult position in dealing
with the matter partly because of the vigorous Press campaign
conducted on behalf of this gentleman, and partly because this is
not the first occasion on which the inventor has put forward a
scheme for which extravagant claims have been made. The result is
the Departments are not able to accept Mr Grindell Matthews
statement about this invention without a scrutiny which he is not
prepared to face.

Unpicking this carefully-worded
statement laid bare the governments inherent scepticism regarding
Matthews claims. Yes, government officials had seen a
demonstration of the alleged death ray  but they were keen to
point out that the circumstances of demonstration were of
Matthews choosing, at his laboratory with all equipment being
provided and set up by him. In government speak: The departmental
representatives were shown nothing which would lead them to credit
the statements which have appeared in the Press as to the
possibilities of the invention.

Furthermore, His Majestys Government
believed that the conditions under which the demonstrations were
made by Mr Matthews were such that it was not possible to form any
opinion as to the value of the device. Carefully worded or not,
the implication seemed to be that Grindell Matthews at best may
have not demonstrated his invention under correct laboratory
conditions, and at worst had brazenly attempted to defraud the
British Government. The statement went on to stress that the
government had been at pains to be scrupulously fair with
Matthews, offering him the chance to repeat the demonstration. All
they required to be convinced was that he use his ray to stop the
engine of a petrol driven motorcycle engine provided by them. On
successful completion of this test, Matthews would then be given
GBP1,000 as a retainer for 14 days whilst the government considered
the basis of further financial negotiations for the purchase or
development of his invention. As yet, the government didnt even
want to know how the ray worked, just for it to be demonstrated to
their satisfaction using their own laboratory conditions. Not an
unreasonable request.

The statement ended somewhat tersely:
Mr Grindell Matthews has refused this offer and it is clear he
has left the country. Unfazed by this scepticism, Grindell
Matthews, still in France, announced he now had eight bids under
consideration. Charles Dick of the British Consulate in Paris met
with Matthews. Dick had investigated Matthews French backer,
Eugene Royer, and found him to be untrustworthy and on the point
of bankruptcy. Matthews seemed unconcerned by this news, happy to
work for Royer seemingly to spite the British government for
daring to ask for that most vulgar of displays, proof. Dicks
subsequent letter to the Air Ministry contained a stark character
sketch of Matthews, observing: It would certainly be advisable to
recommend the very greatest caution in dealing with Mr Matthews if
he is in any way connected with Royer. If such a connection comes
about after the warning I gave Mr. Matthews, I should feel obliged
to consider that the latter was as unworthy of confidence as the
former.

The British government wasnt the only
party in the country interested in the death ray. Sir Samuel
Instone and his brother offered Matthews a substantial cash
payment plus a salary of several thousand pounds a year if he
would keep the invention in the UK. Our offer still stands. It is
made on purely patriotic grounds. Mr Grindell Matthews can have
all the money he needs, said Theodore Instone. Yet Matthews
refused this offer too. Perhaps it had something to do with the
concluding part of Instones statement which read, providing he
satisfies our scientific advisors that the ray has serious
possibilities. There it was again. The small, but significantly
unavoidable matter of conclusive proof that the alleged death ray
worked as its inventor claimed. Even the loftiest fortean ideas
begin to crumble when they are revealed to be empty promises. And
by now, to all but the most gullible observer, the death ray was
looking very much like an empty promise.

An Air Ministry official summed up the
problem succinctly, saying: This invention is either worth a
large sum of money or it is worth nothing. No inventor could
reasonably expect the government to pay a large sum of money for a
patent until it had been fully tested. If the invention fulfils
all that is claimed for it, the inventor has nothing to fear from
official sources.

Quite so. But neither Matthews nor any
of his imitators could provide the vital proof needed. The death
ray, upon which thousands of pounds, hundreds of hours and
millions of column inches had been spent, was worth nothing to
anyone as an idea alone.

The 1st of June 1924 saw Matthews
returning to London, and he was angry. In an interview with the
Sunday Express he defended his lifes work even to the point of
raging at those who referred to his notorious invention as a
ray. It was, he claimed, a beam, not a ray, although quite
what the difference was he failed to say. Matthews still believed
he had a deal with Royer and was insistent his death ray was all
packed and ready to be shipped to France for further development.

Once again the press took up Matthews
cause and allowed him space to rail against those who doubted him.
In response to Lord Birkenhead who had written to The Times
criticising his ray, Matthews argued that it was this attitude
which had lost Britain the advantage in many other areas of
warfare such as aeronautics and torpedo development. Despite all
the talk of ideas and possibilities, as yet few people outside
Grindell Matthews intimate circle had actually seen his death ray
apparatus. This was rectified in the summer of 1924 with the
release of the film The Death Ray. Made by Pathe, the 25-minute
film was basically a drama-documentary, an advertisement for Harry
Grindell Matthews and all his works.

From an entertainment perspective the
film made great viewing, coming as it did in the wake of the
massive publicity given the death ray furor. Yet there was no
evidence that the subject matter of the film had any basis in
reality. Stills show fantastic apparatus, claimed to be the death
ray, but which bear no relation to the small Heath Robinson-like
machine demonstrated to the government weeks earlier. Poetic
license was clearly at work and S R Littlewood, in The Sphere,
made some perceptive observations relevant to the whole affair:
...The Death Ray in which Mr Grindell Matthews is shown pulling
levers of his machine and a rat is shown falling dead in its cage,
a bicycle stopping and aeroplanes galore falling down in flames
from the sky. From the scientific point of view  that is to say
as a proof that it was the ray that killed the rat  I do not
suppose that The Death Ray is intended to be regarded as of any
value at all. One does not for a moment disbelieve Mr Grindell
Matthews. At the same time a film which could have been so
obviously faked leaves one simply with the same amount of
information as one had before save, perhaps, as to the shape of
the machine, which is a sort of searchlight with three
megaphone-like ears attached to it.

There remains, however, the
remarkable personality of Mr Grindell Matthews himself. One cannot
help being at least bewildered by the psychology of a scientist
who can enter into the spirit of a piece of mummery like this so
completely that it is quite clear he was acting for all he was
worth. In view of his many experiments it can evidently have been
no great emotional strain to Mr Grindell Matthews to pull a lever
with the intention of doing nothing worse than stopping a
bicycle-wheel. Yet he pulls that lever with as much impressive
gravity as if he were about some operation upon which life and
death depended.

This seemingly trivial excursion into
film may have been a shrewd move by Matthews. The blanket press
coverage of the death ray story had captured the public
imagination. Now the death ray film allowed them to see it with
their own eyes, and was a perfect visual advertisement for
Matthews, one which was shown widely across Britain and America.
It comes as no surprise then that following Matthews inability to
conclusively demonstrate the death ray he abandoned the quest to
sell his invention to European governments and in July departed to
America. Once again he set about publicising the death ray,
announcing he would develop a higher-powered version of the
machine that would convince the world his beam deserves a place
among the great inventions of history. There were immediate
problems when he was offered $25,000 to demonstrate the ray to the
Radio World Fair at Madison Square Garden in December. Matthews
again declined the offer of easy money, this time claiming that he
was not permitted to demonstrate his invention outside England.
This is a curious statement as there is no evidence he was under
any such constraint, legal or political. Once again, Matthews the
showman was taking his game to the brink. He tantalised the
American public, telling how he would return to Britain and set up
a research station on an island in the Bristol Channel to continue
his work so that, in eighteen months I can perfect my apparatus
so that it will be the most formidable war weapon of the future.

Somewhat predictably, his assertions
drew criticism from the American scientific establishment.
Professor R Woods was scornful of the death ray and offered to
stand in front of it for an indefinite period, confident it would
do him no harm. Nothing, he said, has been done that could lead
a scientist or engineer to place the slightest credence in the
death ray. Criticism not-withstanding, on his return to Britain
Matthews later claimed that America (he was vague) had snapped
up his death ray invention. Quite where this left his claim that
he was not permitted to demonstrate the ray outside England was
unclear. Nor was it stated to whom he had sold his ray.

The Observer seized on these
contradictions, noting how: Many people in this country will be
curious to know the terms and conditions on which the United
States have obtained a monopoly of Mr Grindell Matthews Ray.
Matthews himself was tight-lipped, refusing to say who or how
much. All he would say was that he had returned merely to collect
everything he owned before returning to America.

There the saga of the death ray ends.
Matthews never managed to successfully demonstrate his invention
to anyone's satisfaction. Whether this was because it was a
complex money-making scam or whether the worlds governments were
incapable of grasping the enormity of his ideas is unclear. We do
know however that no-one ever developed a death ray, nor did
Matthews pursue the invention further. Instead he went back to
America where he worked as a consultant for Warner Brothers,
putting his genuine skills in sound and vision technology to good
use.

By the late 1920s, Matthews was back
in Britain with a series of new, bold inventions which actually
worked. His piece de resistance was a device to project
advertisements on clouds.

On Christmas Eve 1930 he stunned
London by projecting the image of an angel onto clouds above
Hampstead Heath. The apparition was so realistic that people miles
away apparently fell to their knees in worship, believing the
Second Coming was at hand! He followed this with demonstrations in
New York, where he projected the Stars and Stripes 10,000ft
(3,000m) above the city (see below).

This invention clearly worked, yet
once again Matthews was beset by problems. Although the invention
could have revolutionised the emerging advertising industry,
no-one seemed interested. Matthews had little time to reflect on
this new failure as darker clouds were gathering and in 1931 he
faced bankruptcy. His bankruptcy papers make interesting reading.

Question: What is your full name?   
Answer: Harry Grindell Grindell.

Grindell Matthews, it seems, wasn't
even his real name. The bankruptcy enquiry laid bare his financial
and personal affairs, reducing his claims and inventions to mere
transactions in a ledger book, profit and loss. The papers reveal
a series of loans and investments made to Matthews, none of which
made money, but which allowed him to live in hotels and luxury
rented accomm-odation whilst he developed his various inventions.
Undeterred, Matthews bounced back from bankruptcy and by 1934 he
had raised sufficient funds from a new generation of financial
backers to relocate to South Wales. There he became a
semi-recluse, building a fortified laboratory with its own private
airfield on the summit of Tor Cloud near Swansea. He soon became
the subject of local lore and legend, with the police arriving in
response to claims that his rays were causing illness among the
local population. Other stories spread that car engines would stop
if they drove too near Matthews mountain fastness.

Financially secure again, he embarked
on another series of inventions. Seeing that the Second World War
was on the horizon, he began to develop the idea of aerial mines
fired by rockets or suspended by barrage balloons. These, he
claimed, could create an effective aerial ring of defence round
cities such as London. This idea was discussed seriously by the
government but never taken up as a practical proposal. Matthews
mind, never still, then came up with the idea of the stratoplane
 a plane which could fly on the edges of space. He became a
member of the British Interplanetary Society and actively pushed
forward ideas which led eventually to the development of rocket
technology.

There were many more inventions,
including a system for detecting submarines. Matthews hauled these
around government departments but as war clouds gathered people
had less and less time for Matthews speculations. The death ray
had proved the death knell for his reputation.

When war finally arrived, Matthews
noted that had his inventions such as the aerial mines been taken
up, London would not have suffered as much as it did in the Blitz.
He could now also see how useful his submarine detector would have
been against the U-Boats stalking the Atlantic. But it was to no
avail. Time had passed him by and on 11 September 1941 Death Ray
Matthews died of a massive heart attack.

Genius or charlatan, probably a little
of both, Grindell Matthews inspired intense debate and massive
publicity. Some of his inventions such as the talking films,
aerophone and sky-projector certainly worked and were years ahead
of their time. Other ideas such as his theories of space travel
would come to fruition later in the 20th century. But it was for
the death ray he was best known and it was his failure to deliver
the goods which was his event-ual downfall, leading the scientific
and political establishments of the era to overlook his other
inventions.

It would be charitable to speculate
that his flirtation with the death ray was mere showmanship to
attract money for his more conventional ideas, much in the same
way that the SETI programme maintains interest in more mundane
aspects of space exploration. If so, it was a gamble which didn't
pay off. We will probably never know.

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![](gre-matth3.jpg)
  
Harry Grindell-Matthews

  


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<http://www.forteantimes.com/features/articles/195/radar_and_the_death_ray.html>  
October 2003

Radar
and
the Death Ray

Some background info on the Grindell
Matthews episode

by

Dr David Clarke and Andy Roberts

Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, in a prophetic speech to the House
of Commons in 1932, declared: it is well for the man in the
street to realise that there is no power on earth that can protect
him from being bombed... the bomber will always get through.

Throughout that decade the dreaded
German Luftwaffe threatened to bring devastation to cities across
Europe, including the British Isles. Consequently, the British
Government was desperate to find an effective method of detection
or defence and once again turned to a death ray.

In 1934 the Air Ministry set up the
Committee for the Scientific Survey of Air Defence. CSSAD
contained some of the brightest minds of the day, and was chaired
by the distinguished Oxford-trained chemist, Sir Henry Tizard, who
two decades later would create the MoDs Flying Saucer Working
Party. Tizards group scrutinised a number of inventions and
ideas, from acoustic mirrors to barrage balloons and eventually
turned to the death ray which many feared the Germans were
already secretly developing.

Following the Grindell Matthews
episode, the Air Ministry offered a standing reward of GBP1,000 to
anyone who could build a death ray that could kill a sheep at 100
yards, but no one claimed the prize. On 18 January 1935 H E
Wimperis, the director of Scientific Research at the Air Ministry,
approached scientist Robert Watson-Watt to advise the government
on the practicability of proposals of the type colloquially
called death ray. The Tizard committee wanted to know if it was
possible to create a beam of electromagnetic energy which could
fry enemy pilots in the cockpit, and detonate bombs before
aircraft could cause damage, just as Grindell Matthews had
proposed a decade earlier.

As Professor R V Jones describes in
his Most Secret War, Watson-Watt gave the problem of calculating
the amount of power required for a death ray to his assistant,
Arnold Skip Watkins, who quickly concluded the proposed ray was
way ahead of what could be achieved using current technology. When
he handed his calculations to Watson-Watt he said: Well then, if
the death ray is not possible, how can we help them?

Wilkins replied that he was aware that
Post Office engineers had noticed that whenever aircraft flew in
the vicinity of BBC masts, it caused disturbances to the radio
signal. Maybe this phenomenon could be utilised for the detecting
enemy aircraft before they reached the British Isles? On 26
February 1935, the day Hitler created the Luftwaffe, Watson-Watt
and his assistant set up an experiment at Daventry in
Northamptonshire which proved it was possible to detect aircraft
by the use of radio waves. As an RAF bomber flew backwards and
forwards between two BBC radio masts, the two men sat inside a van
watching as a tiny glowing green line flared and swelled on a
crude cathode-ray tube display. RDF, or Radar (RAdio Detection
And Ranging)  the greatest secret weapon in the Allied arsenal -
was born. After the demonstration, Watson-Watt declared that
Britain has become an island once more.

The death ray may never have been a
practical weapon, but those who had taken Grindell Matthews
advice to think outside the box and employ their imaginations
had stumbled upon a weapon with far greater possibilities that
would literally change the world.

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![](gmatthews.jpg)  
 Harry Grindell-Matthews  
  


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The
"Secret"
:

US
Patent # 1,575,701  
  
Electric Gas Discharge Tube for Photographic Sound Recording  
  
[ [PDF](us1575701.pdf) ]  
  
  
![](fig1-2.jpg)  
![](fig3.jpg)  
  
![](col1.jpg)![](col2.jpg)  
  
![](col3.jpg)  
  


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![](grindell-matthews.jpg)  
  
![](grin-matt3.jpg)![](grin-matt2.jpg)

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