John Sadler (1779-1838)
John Sadler (1779 -1838), chemist and metallurgist
1779 Born in Oxford, eldest son of James Sadler and his first wife, Mary.
1785 Made a balloon ascent with his father.
By 1793 he was teaching chemistry at Beddoes's Bristol Pneumatic Institution.
From 1800 he was chemical assistant at the Royal Institution, London, and assisted Humphry Davy until 1804 when he issued An Explanation of Terms used in Chemistry.
By 1806 he was smelting lead at Thomas Richard Beaumont's Dukesfield smelt mill, near Hexham and working on metallurgy
From 1806-1809 active with the Newcastle Literary and Philosophical Society
1810 moved to Hackney to superintend the Beaufoy Chemical Works in Lambeth. Lecturer with the Hackney Literary and Philosophical Society.
1814 Paper read to the Geological Society
1821 Patented a new method of making white lead.
Sadler and his wife, Mary, had four children.
1838 died in Battersea, London, on 18 March.