In 1884, he joined the staff of University College, London, and worked for Professor Alexander Kennedy in various teaching and engineering roles. In 1885, he married Louise Newman.[2]
In 1887, he was appointed to the new chair of mechanics and engineering at Heriot-Watt University, and in two years built up a successful department. He returned to London in 1889, to replace his mentor Professor Kennedy as the chair of engineering at University College and to oversee the building of the new Engineering Department in 1895.
In 1901, Hudson Beare was appointed as the third Regius Professor of Engineering at the University of Edinburgh. He moved to a large townhouse at 10 Regent Terrace on Calton Hill.[3] During his time in Edinburgh he increased the number of engineering students and ensured the department had new and well-equipped facilities. With the influx of new students from around the world to the re-invigorated department, in 1931 he organised its transfer from its site in central Edinburgh to the Sanderson Engineering Laboratories, part of the University's King's Buildings campus.[1] A building in this campus is named in his honour.[4] He worked at the University of Edinburgh until 1940,[2] including 22 years as Dean of the Faculty of Engineering.[5]
In 1908 he was appointed convenor of the University's Military Education Committee, in which capacity he raised the profile and capabilities of the University's Officers' Training Corps.[6] During the World War I he was a captain in the Forth Volunteer Division of the Royal Engineers. He served from 1921 to 1926 as the second Chairman of the Central Organisation of Military Education Committees of the Universities and University Colleges, what is now the Council of Military Education Committees of the Universities of the United Kingdom (COMEC).
He was made Deputy Lieutenant of the County of the City of Edinburgh in 1920,[8][9] and was knighted in 1926.[10] He received an honorary LLD degree from the University of Edinburgh in 1936.
In his spare time he study of beetles, on which subject he was accepted as an authority by entomologists.[citation needed]
Works
Hudson Beare's talents seem mainly to have been towards academic administration and inspiring younger engineers, but he did publish research that was appreciated at the time: The Building-Stones of Great Britain: their Crushing Strength and other Properties (Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, vol. 107, p. 341, 1891–2, Part 1) reported the results of his extensive experimental testing in his laboratories at University College London, of different types of rock from around the British Isles, and this was awarded a Telford premium by the Institution of Civil Engineers.
He translated from the Italian, for the benefit of engineering students, Luigi Cremona's Graphical Statics: Two Treatises on the Graphical Calculus and Reciprocal Figures in Graphical Statics (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1890).[11]