Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

GAS LIGHTING

EARLY BRITISH EXPERIENCE. Crowds gathered in Pall Mall, London, on February 6, 1807, to see the “first street in the world lit by coalgas.” Fifteen years earlier William Murdoch had lighted his cottage at Redruth with gas, but the London experiment was left to the enterprise of a company promoter named Winsor, or Winser, who in 1806 had created a sensation by illuminating the front of Carlton House, home of the Prince Regent, by gas lamps. Having falsified the gibe of Sir Humphry Davy that it would be as easy to bring down a piece of the moon to light London as to do it with coal-gas, Winsor tried to form a “New Patriotic, Imperial, and National Light and Heat Company, the profits of which he modestly estimated at £229,000,000 per annum, out of which he proposed to pay shareholders 1,000 per cent and apply the balance to redeeming the National Debt. The fantastic project fizzled out, as might have been expected, but later Winsor laid the foundations of a great gas and coke company which still functions.—“ Manchester Guardian.”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19420616.2.56

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 16 June 1942, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
182

GAS LIGHTING Wairarapa Times-Age, 16 June 1942, Page 4

GAS LIGHTING Wairarapa Times-Age, 16 June 1942, Page 4

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert