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  2. Aug 23, 2011 · Now for the dangerous bit… There were two types of gas used in Victorian times ‘coal’ and natural gas. Coal gas included a rather lethal combination of hydrogen, methane, carbon monoxide and sulphur.

  3. Fasionable town houses constructed in the 1860s often had a central pendant gas light (that is to say a gas light attached to the ceiling) in each of the principal rooms with a ventilation grille above, cunningly disguised in the deep recesses of the ceiling rose.

  4. In 1807, he demonstrated the use of gas to light streets, in London’s Pall Mall and in 1812 he obtained a Royal Charter to build the world’s first public gas works, which opened in Westminster in 1813.

  5. Jul 15, 2020 · Gas lighting would spread to towns and cities across England. Initially, gasholders had to enclose brick buildings known as ‘gasholder houses’. The gas bell was attached to a chain hung over a roof beam and balanced with a weight at the other end.

  6. May 30, 2011 · Gas street lighting wasn't widely available until the mid-nineteenth century and as late as the 1930s, in London, almost half of the streets lamps still used gas. A gas street lamp only illuminated a few feet around its post.

  7. More economical than oil lamps or candles, the technology proliferated and by 1823, several towns and cities in Britain were lit by gas. By 1859, around a thousand gas works had been created to cope with the demand, but the predominance of the gas lamp was to be short-lived.

  8. Jan 21, 2022 · There are over 80 Victorian gas lamps still working around the town – an important part of its Victorian heritage. In the early 20th century, there would have been well over a thousand. Source: Creative Commons.

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