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  • Match - Wikipedia
    The first modern, self-igniting match was invented in 1805 by Jean Chancel, assistant to Professor Louis Jacques Thénard of Paris The head of the match consisted of a mixture of potassium chlorate, sulfur, gum arabic and sugar The match was ignited by dipping its tip in a small asbestos bottle filled with sulfuric acid [4]
  • History of Matches - From Early to Modern Friction Matches
    Friction matches were first introduced to the public in 1826 by John Walker, English chemist and druggist from Stockton-on-Tees It was made by combining paste of sulfur with gum, potassium chlorate, sugar, antimony trisulfide, and ignited by drawing the match between the fold of sandpaper
  • Match | History, Chemistry Uses | Britannica - Encyclopedia Britannica
    The first friction matches were invented by John Walker, an English chemist and apothecary, whose ledger of April 7, 1827, records the first sale of such matches Walker’s “Friction Lights” had tips coated with a potassium chloride–antimony sulfide paste, which ignited when scraped between a fold of sandpaper
  • John Walker - Inventor of the Friction Match | Stockton Heritage
    Originally the matches were made of pasteboard but 3 inch splints of wood were soon substituted - the friction head was added to the stick by dipping These matches were very popular in the
  • Inventor Bio: John Walker and The Friction Match
    On April 7, 1827, John Walker of Stockton-on-Tees, England (Dunham County), first sold the item he had invented the year before, the now taken for granted friction match
  • A History of the World - Object : John Walkers Friction Light - BBC
    In 1826, John Walker, a chemist in Stockton on Tees, discovered through lucky accident that a stick coated with chemicals burst into flame when scraped across his hearth at home He went on
  • Biography - John Walker, inventor of the Friction Match
    Then, in 1826, this humble man made an invention which literally changed the world – the Friction Match His experiments with explosive chemicals led to his breakthrough idea of a simple way to produce an instantaneous flame on the end of a thin wooden splint pre-coated with a mixture of combustible chemicals
  • John Walker The Match – This is Stockton on Tees
    Walker did not patent his “Congreves” as he called the matches (alluding to the Congreve’s rocket invented in 1808), preferring instead to pursue his scientific studies He did not divulge the exact composition of his matches Walker was a former chemist at 59 High Street, in Stockton-on-Tees
  • The History of Matches - Back Then History
    In 1845, Austrian chemist Anton von Schrötter discovered red phosphorus, which is nontoxic and is not subject to spontaneous combustion, and this led to the creation of the safety match, which separated the combustion ingredients between the match head and a special striking surface
  • Friction Matches Were a Boon to Those Lighting Fires–Not So Much to . . .
    A British pharmacist named John Walker invented the match by accident on this day in 1826, according to Today in Science History He was working on an experimental paste that might be used in





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