Edison Swan Electric Co: Difference between revisions
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[[image:Im193105GHK-Ediswan.jpg|thumb| May 1931. Ediswan. ]] | [[image:Im193105GHK-Ediswan.jpg|thumb| May 1931. Ediswan. ]] | ||
[[Image:Im19311020Motor-Edison4.jpg|thumb| October 1931. ]] | [[Image:Im19311020Motor-Edison4.jpg|thumb| October 1931. ]] | ||
[[Image:Im1932RG-Ediswan.jpg|thumb| 1932. ]] | |||
[[Image:ImWT19330902-Ediswan.jpg|thumb| September 1933.]] | [[Image:ImWT19330902-Ediswan.jpg|thumb| September 1933.]] | ||
[[Image:ImWT19330902-Ediswan2.jpg|thumb| September 1933.]] | [[Image:ImWT19330902-Ediswan2.jpg|thumb| September 1933.]] |
Latest revision as of 10:52, 2 March 2021























































of 36-7 Queen Street, London (1908)
of 155 Charing Cross Road, London WC2. (1936)
of Ponders End, Middlesex (1936)
1875 Joseph Swan experimented with incandescent lamps but lacked an adequate vacuum pump. He heard about a newly invented air pump known as a Sprengel pump and applied this to his experiments. He demonstrated a carbon filament light bulb in Newcastle. Swan received a British patent for the light bulb in 1878.
Thomas Edison turned his attentions to electric lighting towards the end of 1877. He believed that commercially successful lighting needed to have similar characteristics to the existing gas lighting. His early experiments using carbonized paper and carbon were failures. The lamp usually cited as his first success was made on 19th October 1879 but the carbonized cotton used as the conductor was still very fragile. He later found that a particular type of Japanese bamboo was the most satisfactory.
Edison was not the first to patent the modern design of the light bulb - Swan's patent predated his. Edison lost in the British courts for infringement of Swan's patent. As part of the settlement, Edison was forced to take Swan in as a partner in his British electric works. The company was called the Edison and Swan United Electric Light Co. Eventually, Edison acquired all of Swan's interest in the company.
1883 In the United States, Edison didn't have the chance to put up a fight. The U.S. Patent Office had ruled on October 8, 1883 that Edison's patents were based on the prior art of a man named William Sawyer and were invalid. In addition, Swan had already sold his U.S. patent rights to the Brush Electric Company in June of 1882.
1883 The Edison and Swan United Electric Light Co Ltd was registered on 26th October, manufacturers of electric lamps and fittings. [1]
After c.1908 the Edison and Swan United Electric Light company seems to have been increasingly known as Edison Swan Electric Co although the original name was used up until at least 1916.
1909 Tungsten filaments had largely replaced carbon filaments in lamps made by all manufacturers for most purposes.
1914 Manufacturers of drawn wire (tungsten) and carbon filament lamps, general electric light apparatus and fittings. [2]
1916 Ediswan set up Britain's first radio thermionic valve factory at Ponders End. This area, with nearby Brimsdown, subsequently developed as a centre for the manufacture of valves, cathode ray tubes etc and nearby parts of Enfield became an important centre of the electronics industry for much of the 20th century.
WWI: Edison and Swan Electric Light works (Ponder's End, Middlesex) doubled production of bulbs and tubing; special glasses developed for 0.5W lamps, signalling lamps and wireless valves[3]. Edison Swan and Cossor began quantity production of thermionic valves for the armed forces[4].
1920 Jan. Physical and Optical Societies Exhibition. Exhibited wireless telegraphy. [5]
1922 Mr H. A. Mumford was appointed district manager at Leeds for the Company succeeding Mr J. D. Chisholm who resigned.[6]
1925 Ediswan Crystal Set was designed for personal listening through a single pair of headphones. It used a mineral crystal, commonly galena, as a detector. Ediswan is a trademark name conflated from the name of the company formed between Joseph Swan and Thomas Alva Edison as a result of the major court battle they fought over who was the original inventor of the electric light bulb.
1920s Ediswan became part of British Thomson-Houston Co (BTH) and subsequently AEI.
1928 As part of the formation of AEI, the new company bought Edison Swan Electric Co (Ediswan) which then took on valve production for the whole company.
1928 As part of the rationalization involved in forming AEI, Metropolitan-Vickers's merchandising businesses, including Cosmos, were transferred to Edison Swan Electric Co. The domestic appliance work was mainly transferred to Harcourts and the Cosmos works concentrated on the manufacture of lamps and valves.
1936 Started production of cathode ray tubes for the new BBC television service.
1937 Radio valves, accumulators, electric lamps and cable manufacturers. "Ediswan" Electrical Products. [7]
1949 The Edison Swan Electric company absorbed Edison Swan Cables Ltd of Lydbrook and Cosmos Manufacturing Co manufacturing valves at Brimsdown and Sunderland and it was expected later that year to absorb Harcourts Ltd, another subsidiary of AEI and maker of electrical light fittings[8].
1952 The Edison Swan Co purchased British Mechanical Productions Ltd and its subsidiary General Accessories Co Ltd, which made electrical accessories under the Clix brand and radio and television components, thereby filling a gap in parent AEI's range of products[9].
c.1956 Siemens and Edison Swan Electric Co were amalgamated as Siemens Edison Swan[10]
See Also
- 1918 Directory of Manufacturers in Engineering and Allied Trades: Company E
- 1922 Who's Who In Engineering: Company E
- 1923 British Industries Fair
- 1924 Wireless Exhibition
- 1926/10/22 Motor Show
- 1926 British Industries Fair
- 1929 Royal Warrants (03)
- 1929 Royal Warrants (12)
- 1936 Motor Show
- 1937 Motor Show
- 1937 The Aeroplane Directory of the Aviation and Allied Industries
- 1938 Ironmonger Diary and Hardware Buyers Guide: Proprietary Names
- 1938 Motor Show
- 1949 Motor Show
- 1950 Motor Show
- 1951 Motor Show
- 1952 Motor Show
- 1953 Motor Show
- 1953 Radio Show
- 1953 Who's Who in the Motor Industry: Companies E
- 1954 Commercial Motor Show
- 1954 Motor Show
- 1955 Motor Show
- 1955 Radio Show
- 1956 Motor Show
- AEI
- AEI: Lamps and Valves
- Albert Henry Midgley
- Alfred Egerton Kidner
- Alfred S. Giles
- Alfred William Connolly
- Andrew Humphry Salwey MacCallum
- Archibald Parker Welch
- Arthur Peckett
- BTH
- Belling and Co
- British Lighting Industries
- British Westinghouse
- C. J. Ford
- Charles Horace Cox
- Charles Reginald Belling
- Cosmos Lamp Works
- Edison-Swan Electric Co
- Edison Swan Cables
- Edison and Swan
- Edison and Swan United Electric Light Co
- Ediswan Co
- Edward Baudoin Ellice Clark
- Edward John Wade
- Electric Lamp Manufacturers Association
- Enfield Cable Works
- Engineering 1939 Jan-Jun: Index: General
- Engineering 1939 Jan-Jun: Index: Paragraphs
- Engineering 1941 Jul-Dec: Index: Paragraphs
- Engineering 1942 Jul-Dec: Index: Paragraphs
- Engineering 1943 Jan-Jun: Index: Paragraphs
- Engineering 1952 Jan-Jun: Index: General
- Engineering 1953 Jan-Jun: Index: General
- Engineering 1957 Jan-Jun: Index
- F. W. Berwick and Co
- Frank Walker
- Frederic William Leevers
- GEC
- Geoffrey Parr
- George Edwin Bailey
- H. W. Smith and Co
- Harcourts
- Hugh Warren
- John Edgar Edmundson
- John Wigham Edmundson
- Metropolitan-Vickers
- Metropolitan-Vickers Electrical Co 1899-1949 by John Dummelow: 1929-1939
- Nazeing Glass Works
- P. S. Turner
- Paul Freedman
- Siemens Brothers and Co
- Siemens Edison Swan
- Sizaire-Berwick
- The Engineer 1919/08/22
- The Engineer 1923/03/09
- The Engineer 1923/11/23
- The Engineer 1924/10/03
- The Engineer 1926/01/15
- The Engineer 1926/02/05
- The Engineer 1927/03/18
- The Engineer 1927/05/13
- The Engineer 1932 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1937 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1938 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1939 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1939 Jul-Dec: Index
- The Engineer 1941 Jul-Dec: Index
- The Engineer 1942 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1944 Jul-Dec: Index
- Tungsten Lamp Association
- William Miles Horsfall
Sources of Information
- ↑ The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
- ↑ 1914 Whitakers Red Book
- ↑ Glass-Making in England, by H. J. Powell
- ↑ Competition Commission report [1]
- ↑ The Engineer of 16th Jan 1920 p62
- ↑ The Engineer 1922/07/14.
- ↑ 1937 The Aeroplane Directory of the Aviation and Allied Industries
- ↑ The Times, 14 June 1949
- ↑ The Times, 2 April 1952
- ↑ The Times, Jun 12, 1958