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  2. Victor S. Johnson Sr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_S._Johnson_Sr.

    Victor Samuel Johnson Sr. (February 6, 1882 – August 29, 1943) was an American businessman who founded Aladdin Industries, best known as manufacturers of kerosene mantle lamps. In 1904, he was a bookkeeper and salesman for the Iowa Soap Company in Burlington, Iowa.

  3. Vapalux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vapalux

    In 1925 they started making lamp and lantern parts for the Tilley company, a relationship which lasted until 1938 when Willis & Bates began manufacturing and selling lanterns on their own. The Vapalux pressure lamp bears a close resemblance with the Tilley lamp, in the way the burner works and how the mantle is attached. This is not surprising ...

  4. Coleman Lantern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coleman_Lantern

    The Coleman Lantern is a line of pressure lamps first introduced by the Coleman Company in 1914. This led to a series of lamps that were originally made to burn kerosene or gasoline. Current models use kerosene, gasoline, Coleman fuel or propane and use one or two mantles to produce an intense white light.

  5. Gas mantle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_mantle

    Gas mantle in a street lamp (cold) Mantles in their unused flat-packed form. To produce a mantle, cotton is woven or knit into a net bag, impregnated with soluble nitrates of the chosen metals, and then transported to its destination. The user installs the mantle and then burns it to remove the cotton bag and convert the metal nitrates to ...

  6. Gas lighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_lighting

    Initially, Zagreb was illuminated by 60,000 lamps, but as of 1987, only 248 gas street lamps illuminate old parts of the city. [52] Zagreb gas lamps are manually managed by lamplighters. [52] Prague, where gas lighting was introduced on 15 September 1847, [53] had about 10,000 gas streetlamps in the 1940s.

  7. Victor S. Johnson Jr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_S._Johnson_Jr.

    Johnson graduated from Amherst College in 1938 and Yale Law School in 1941. [1] [2] He served as a second lieutenant from the United States Army until February 1946.His father Victor S. Johnson Sr. died in 1943, so upon his discharge, Johnson Jr. took over the Mantle Lamp Company of America, the company his father founded in 1908 that provided kerosene lighting to rural America.