Juckes and Swinburne: Difference between revisions
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of Wenlock Street, City Road, London | of Wenlock Street, City Road, London | ||
1841 John Juckes, of Lewisham, gained a patent for improving furnaces. | 1841 [[John Juckes]], of Lewisham, gained a patent for improving furnaces. | ||
1843 Mr John Juckes presented his plans for consuming smoke, already well known to the public, as well as his revolving grate, to the British Association meeting<ref>The Morning Post, 26 August 1843</ref>. | 1843 Mr John Juckes presented his plans for consuming smoke, already well known to the public, as well as his revolving grate, to the British Association meeting<ref>The Morning Post, 26 August 1843</ref>. |
Latest revision as of 21:15, 4 February 2013
of Wenlock Street, City Road, London
1841 John Juckes, of Lewisham, gained a patent for improving furnaces.
1843 Mr John Juckes presented his plans for consuming smoke, already well known to the public, as well as his revolving grate, to the British Association meeting[1].
1851 John Juckes was declared insolvent[2].
1851 Juckes' patented consuming furnace[3].
1855 Juckes was in Queens Prison in Surrey; his patent had been sold to Groucock who had died; title to it was in the possession of Reed and others who petitioned for its extension[4].
1861 John Juckes junior, furnace maker, of City Road, was declared bankrupt[5].
1866 Juckes and Swinburne: improvements in locomotive boiler furnaces [6]
1866 Head, Ashby and Co, Teesdale Iron Works, advertised a machine that consumed smoke and improved economy of fuel, based on Juckes' patent, improved by the company[7].
1868 John Juckes junior and John Swinburne's patent on improvement in locomotive boiler furnaces (1865) became void due to non-payment [8]