Thanks, I did read through that site when I first got the document, it has a lot of great info!
Here's what little I could find on Bryce Douglas. He seems to be the same guy, but that is just a guess. There was a Bryce Douglas who was a designer for Cunard at about the right time, I'm guessing this is his document. Look under the ship "Aurania".
http://www.merchantnavyofficers.com/cunard3.htmlAddding this in after posting...
I just found that he worked for John Elder & Co., of Glasgowals, and built the "machinery" for
Etruria, Umbria (sister ship), Oregon, America, City of Rome, Alaska, Servia , Aurania, Etruria and Umbria, the Oregon, Arizona, and Alaska according to this page:
http://www.gjenvick.com/SteamshipArticles/DevelopmentOfTheSteamship-Part6.htmlAnd found a letter written by him:
14 Great George Street — London, S. W.
Barrow-tn^Furness, May i8th, 1888.
Dear Sir:
In reply to your request regarding my experience
in connection with petroleum as fuel on board steam-
ers in the Pacific, I have the pleasure to inform you
that when I was Superintendent of the Factory of
the Pacific Steam Navigation Company, I arranged
one of their small steamers, the "Supe", to bum oil,
which it did with very great success.
At that time (1874) the price of Cardiff coal, in
Callao, was $.17 per ton, and we paid only 7 cents
per gallon for oil.
From a memorandum of those trials, it appears
that on a short voyage from Callao to Guafiape, the
quantity of oil consumed was 2200 gallons, which,
compared with the 15 tons of coal that was burned
before, was a great advantage in favor of the oil.
Thus:
IStonsof coal at$.17 $. 255
2220 gallons of oil at 7 cents 154
Difference in favor of oil $. 101
The oil used then was from the wells near Paita
— 21 —
(Negritos) and for a long time past, I have been
under the impression that an immense and, probably,
inexhaustible supply of petroleum exists there. I
think it even exists underneath the sea, because, on
many occasions, 1 have seen the surface of the water
covered with oil, for a number of miles around, in
front of Point Parifias.
I enclose you a copy of the original memorandum
which I addressed to Mr. Petrie, General Manager
of the Company on the Coast.
Your obedient servant,
A. D. Bryce-Douglas.
He seems to go by Bryce Douglas, Bryce-Douglas, D. Bryce-Douglas or A.D. Bryce Douglas. It seems to all be the same person though.