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type: Biografies Remove all filters
Searched for "john". @resultsTotal results Displaying results 1 to 20 of 50.
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Zeppelin

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after he went as an observer to the American Civil War. In Minnesota he met the German-born balloonist John Steiner and made an aerial ascent in a tethered hot-air balloon. Having taking part in the Austro-Prussian

York

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John Oliver York was a British civil and mechanical engineer who undertook construction projects in several western European countries. He was born at Birmingham in 1811 and studied in the office of a

Wilkinson

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Wilkinson (1695-1784) and the younger brother of John Wilkinson (1728-1808) the most prominent ironmaster of the British Industrial Revolution. Both William and John Wilkinson grew up in Cumbria, where their [...] became evident that John Wilkinson had built many ‘pirate’ steam engines that infringed the patents of James Watt. The case went to Chancery and then to King’s Bench, and eventually John Wilkinson bought [...] The family moved in 1749 to the blast furnace at Bersham in North Wales, although from the mid-1750s John Wilkinson was principally concerned with new ironworks in Shropshire and Staffordshire. After disputes

Watt

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Sweden and Russia. In the 1790s it became evident that other engine builders, notably the ironmaster John Wilkinson, had infringed the Watt patents by building ‘pirate’ engines. Watt developed elements of

Walker

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Glasgow and was apprenticed to his uncle, the civil engineer Ralph Walker (1741-1824). He worked with John Rennie (1761-1821) on the construction of the West India Docks in London. From 1803 he took responsibility

Verbruggen

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many years of neglect. He was assisted by his son, Pieter (1735-1786), newly qualified in law, and by John Siegler, who had worked for 15 years at the arsenal at Douai. Verbruggen was responsible to General [...] American War of Independence. The technology that Verbruggen employed was surrounded in secrecy, but John Wilkinson (1728-1808), the leading British ironmaster of the time, and a manufacturer of cannon, gained

Triewald

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migrated to Sweden from Germany. While in his twenties he visited London and attended lectures by John Theophilus Desaguliers (1683-1744), experimental assistant to Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1726-27) who

Trevithick

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the present Euston station. Trevithick’s high-pressure steam engines were built at the foundry of John Hazledine at Bridgnorth, and one of them is displayed in the Science Museum, London. Trevithick’s

Thornton

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John Thornton is an important example of the many individuals who enabled the diffusion of technologies during the Industrial Revolution by taking their skills and knowledge to another country. He worked

Tennant

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when techniques were developed to make chlorine as a biproduct in the Leblanc process. Tennant’s son John led Charles Tennant and Company for the next 40 years and it continues today.

Stephenson

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Blücher , in 1814 for Killingworth colliery. This improved on the earlier work of Richard Trevithick and John Blenkinsop to make a more reliable locomotive. In 1815, he invented a safety lamp for use in mines

Stephens

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(originally John James, 1747–1826). Stephens was born in Cornwall, England, where his father was a schoolteacher. At the age of around 15, after his parents died, he went to work with his uncle, John Stephens [...] south of Lisbon in 1719 and was relocated to Marinha Grande in around 1747 by the Irish glass-maker John Beare to use local supplies of sand and charcoal. Stephens expanded the works with finance from Pombal

Solvay

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Russia and the United States. The process was introduced to Great Britain in 1874 at Northwich by John Brunner (1842-1919) and Ludwig Mond (1839-1919). The Solvay process superseded the method of making

Schönerer

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He brought equipment, a locomotive and expert workers from Britain, including the factory manager John Haswell. At the same time he directed construction of the steam-operated Vienna-Gloggnitz Railway

Samuelson

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Hull. In 1853 Samuelson attended the Cleveland Agricultural Show, where C B Dockray introduced him to John Vaughan, the pioneer of the iron industry in that part of Yorkshire. The following year Samuelson

Roebuck

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From around the mid-eighteenth century, the chemist and entrepreneur John Roebuck influenced important developments in the British Industrial Revolution, particularly in the manufacture of sulphuric acid

Roberts

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and St George`s Buildings, Bourdon Street, Mayfair, built in 1852-53 for the philanthropic builder John Newson, which still remains. Roberts designed the model houses for the working class that were displayed

Robert

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Revolution. Didot bought the patent and prototype from Robert and in 1801 Didot’s English brother-in-law John Gamble took the project to the Fourdrinier brothers, who were paper merchants. They invested great

Rennie

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John Rennie was a leading millwright and one of the most prolific British engineers of docks and waterways in the Industrial Revolution. As either designer or consulting engineer he reported on over 200 [...] India. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society but turned down a knighthood. His sons George and John continued the practice after his death.

Reden

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England and in July 1789 was the guest of the ironmaster John Wilkinson (1728-1808) at Broseley. The same year the Welsh ironmaster Jeremiah Homfray and John Wilkinson stayed with him in Silesia. Short extracts

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