William
Murdoch
1754-1839
William Murdoch, the son of an Ayrshire mill designer, was born
in 1754. Murdoch had an excellent grasp of mechanics and, in 1777,
he walked 300 miles to Birmingham to meet James Watt, in the hope
of persuading Watt to employ him at his factory. Watt's business
partner, engineer Matthew Boulton, took him on. Boulton later
described him as the finest engine erector he had ever seen.
Despite
attempts to entice him to employment elsewhere, the loyal Murdoch
remained works manager with Watt and Boulton's company - even
after they persuaded him against patenting his own steam engine
research into high pressure engines, which Watt and Boulton did
not wish to involve themselves with.
Murdoch's
best known contribution, then, was to gas lighting. In Redruth
in Cornwall, while managing a pumping engine installation, Murdoch
made an important discovery. He was relaxing by the fire one evening,
when he placed some coal dust in the bowl of his pipe, and placed
this in the fire. As coal gas was formed and came out of the mouthpiece,
Murdoch saw it shine brightly. He had discovered the properties
of gas as an illuminant.
From
this quiet beginning stemmed Glasgow's first attempts at street
and building illumination, and in 1817 the Glasgow's Gas Light
Company was formed.
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