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  2. Lewis Waterman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Waterman

    Lewis Edson Waterman (November 20, 1836 – May 1, 1901) was an American inventor. He held multiple fountain pen patents and was the founder of the Waterman Pen Company . His entry into fountain pen manufacturing has only recently been properly researched.

  3. Waterman Pen Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterman_Pen_Company

    Lewis Waterman, an insurance salesman in New York City, invented the first truly functional fountain pen in the early 1880s. An apocryphal story is that a typical pen of the day leaked all over a contract he had prepared for a large policy, and by the time Waterman returned with a new document, his client had signed with someone else. [2]

  4. Timeline of lighting technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_lighting...

    1875 Henry Woodward patents an electric light bulb. 1876 Pavel Yablochkov invents the Yablochkov candle, the first practical carbon arc lamp, for public street lighting in Paris. 1879 (About Christmas time) Col. R. E. Crompton illuminated his home in Porchester Gardens, using a primary battery of Grove Cells, then a generator which was better ...

  5. Benjamin Electric Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Electric...

    The company's factory in Illinois was closed in 1963, and was replaced with a new 250,000-square-foot (23,000 m 2) light fixture plant in Sparta, TN. Biography of Reuben Berkley Benjamin and background history of Benjamin Electric Manufacturing Company / Benjamin Electric, Ltd. London Citation and summarization from:

  6. Alessandro Cruto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alessandro_Cruto

    Alessandro Cruto was an Italian inventor, born in the town of Piossasco, near Turin, who created an early incandescent light bulb.. Son of a construction foreman, he attended the school of architecture at the University of Turin, while also attending Physics and Chemistry lectures with the dream of crystallizing carbon to obtain diamonds. [1]

  7. Limelight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lime_light

    Limelight (also known as Drummond light or calcium light) [1] is a non-electric type of stage lighting that was once used in theatres and music halls. An intense illumination is created when a flame fed by oxygen and hydrogen is directed at a cylinder of quicklime ( calcium oxide ), [ 2 ] due to a combination of incandescence and ...

  8. Edward F. Caldwell & Co. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_F._Caldwell_&_Co.

    The Cooper-Hewitt Museum Library includes an E. F. Caldwell & Co. Collection with more than 50,000 images, of which roughly 37,000 are black-and-white photographs and approximately 13,000 are original design drawings of lighting fixtures and other metal objects produced by the company from the late 19th to the mid-20th century. [7]

  9. Daniel McFarlan Moore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_McFarlan_Moore

    Daniel McFarlan Moore (February 27, 1869 – June 15, 1936) was an American electrical engineer and inventor. He developed a novel light source, the "Moore lamp", and a business that produced them in the early 1900s.