enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Match - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Match

    Early matches were made from blocks of woods with cuts separating the splints but leaving their bases attached. Later versions were made in the form of thin combs. The splints would be broken away from the comb when required. [10] A noiseless match was invented in 1836 by the Hungarian János Irinyi, who was a student of chemistry. [24]

  3. Vesta case - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vesta_case

    They were made throughout the world including the United Kingdom, in the U.S.A., continental Europe, Japan and Australia. Important and notable English makers of vesta cases included silversmiths such as Mappin & Webb, Sampson Mordan, [2] Asprey & Co., William Neale & Sons, Elkington & Co., Saunders & Shepherd and William Hair Haseler, who partnered with Arthur Lasenby Liberty, the founder of ...

  4. John Walker (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Walker_(inventor)

    Following the ideas laid out by the French chemist Charles Sauria, who in 1830 invented the first phosphorus-based match by replacing the antimony sulfide in Walker's matches with white phosphorus, matches were first patented in the United States in 1836, in Massachusetts, being smaller in size and safer to use. White phosphorus was later ...

  5. Diamond Match Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_Match_Company

    Following the Panic of 1893, Barber moved the Diamond Match Company factory in Akron to the adjacent town of his own creation, Barberton. [5] He turned the abandoned Akron match factory into the Diamond Rubber Company factory. The Diamond Match Company was the largest manufacturer of matches in the United States in the late nineteenth century. [6]

  6. Glossary of firelighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_firelighting

    Main article: Match. A typical modern match is made of a small wooden stick or stiff paper. One end is coated with a material that can be ignited by frictional heat generated by striking the match against a suitable surface. [18] An open matchbook A tinderbox (approx. 3 in (7.6 cm) in length) with firesteel and flint matchbook. Main article ...

  7. Johan Edvard Lundström - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johan_Edvard_Lundström

    Alexander Lagerman (1836–1904), a Swedish engineer who was employed by the Lundström brothers, invented the first fully automatic match machine. The safety match combined with the advanced machines that the company developed themselves, soon made the company in Jönköping the largest match company in Scandinavia and one of the world's ...

  8. Fire striker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_striker

    From the Iron Age forward, until the invention of the friction match in the early 1800s by John Walker, the use of flint and steel was a common method of fire lighting. Percussion fire-starting was prevalent in Europe during ancient times, the Middle Ages and the Viking Age. [3] [6]

  9. Bajan stick-licking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bajan_stick-licking

    Bajan sticklicking (often spelled stick-licking) is the traditional form of stick fighting in Barbados. [1] It is a stick fighting martial art that has its roots from Africa , where two participants used fire-hardened wooden sticks, varying in length as weapons and carrying out fighting techniques.

  1. Related searches when were stick matches invented in the world today youtube video fire disc

    who invented friction matchthe first friction match