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  1. In grand houses, lamps required a new room for the cleaning of their glass shades. The Duke of Rutland at Belvoir Castle had a trifling 400 for his hard-working servants to polish. Yet the oil lamp would soon be superseded by gas, which made its appearance in factories, theatres and street-lighting long before it penetrated the home.

  2. 19th century. 1800–1809 Humphry Davy invents the arc lamp when using Voltaic piles (battery) for his electrolysis experiments. 1802 William Murdoch illuminates the exterior of the Soho Foundry with gas. 1805 Philips and Lee's Cotton Mill, Manchester was the first industrial factory to be fully lit by gas. 1809 Humphry Davy publicly ...

  3. Jan 27, 2023 · By 1914, 88.5 million lamps were in use, with only 15% of them having carbon filaments. Improvements in efficiency and production were made through the early and mid-1900s, leading to the incandescent bulb we know today. The Fluorescent Lamp . Alongside the development of the incandescent lamp was the fluorescent bulb.

    • Sanitary towels... A material called Cellucotton had already been invented before war broke out, by what was then a small US firm - Kimberly-Clark. The company's head of research, Ernst Mahler, and its vice-president, James, C Kimberly, had toured pulp and paper plants in Germany, Austria and Scandinavia in 1914 and spotted a material five times more absorbent than cotton and - when mass-produced - half as expensive.
    • and paper hankies. Marketing sanitary pads was not easy, however, partly because women were loath to buy the product from male shop assistants. The company urged shops to allow customers to buy it simply by leaving money in a box.
    • Sun lamp. In the winter of 1918, it's estimated that half of all children in Berlin were suffering from rickets- a condition whereby bones become soft and deformed.
    • Daylight saving time. The idea of putting the clocks forward in spring and back in autumn was not new when WW1 broke out. Benjamin Franklin had suggested it in a letter to The Journal of Paris in 1784.
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  5. Coleman Company. The Coleman Lantern is a line of pressure lamps first introduced by the Coleman Company in 1914. This led to a series of lamps that were originally made to burn kerosene or gasoline. Current models use kerosene, gasoline, Coleman fuel ( white gas) or propane and use one or two mantles to produce an intense white light.

    • Coleman Company
    • Coleman Company
  6. Jan 29, 2009 · The definition of a hurricane lamp is. candlestick or oil lantern protected against drafts or winds by a glass chimney (Webster) this link to a replica will show what was meant Hurricane lamp. Modern 'hurricane lamps' are in fact what was known as storm lanterns or lamps (originally a naval invention) see attached.

  7. Feb 23, 2015 · VICTORY. NOV 11, 1918. 75 M/M SHELL. The second, engraved on a copper driving band located a few inches above the base, was from Isaiah 2:4, "They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their ...

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