enow.com Web Search

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Jennings

    George Jennings (10 November 1810 – 17 April 1882) was an English sanitary engineer and plumber who invented the first public flush toilets. Josiah George Jennings was born on 10 November 1810 in Eling, at the edge of the New Forest in Hampshire. He was the eldest of seven children of Jonas Joseph Jennings and Mary Dimmock.

  3. Thomas Crapper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Crapper

    He founded Thomas Crapper & Co in London, a plumbing equipment company. His notability with regard to toilets has often been overstated, mostly due to the publication in 1969 of a fictional biography by New Zealand satirist Wallace Reyburn. [2] Crapper held nine patents, three of them for water closet improvements such as the floating ballcock.

  4. Alexander Cumming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Cumming

    Alexander Cumming FRSE (sometimes referred to as Alexander Cummings; 1733 – 8 March 1814) [1] was a Scottish watchmaker and instrument inventor, who was the first to patent a design of the flush toilet in 1775, which had been pioneered by Sir John Harington, but without solving the problem of foul smells.

  5. 50 Inventions From The Past That Were Amazingly Innovative - AOL

    www.aol.com/98-historical-inventions-were-ahead...

    Ground level latrines with overhead water reservoirs to be tipped in to perform the flush abounded in the savvy city. Image credits: Reckon Team #36 Flying Cars

  6. Flush toilet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flush_toilet

    A flush toilet (also known as a flushing toilet, water closet (WC); see also toilet names) is a toilet that disposes of human waste (i.e., urine and feces) by collecting it in a bowl and then using the force of water to channel it ("flush" it) through a drainpipe to another location for treatment, either nearby or at a communal facility.

  7. History of water supply and sanitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_water_supply...

    The city of Fustat also had multi-storey tenement buildings (with up to six floors) with flush toilets, which were connected to a water supply system, and flues on each floor carrying waste to underground channels. [46]

  8. Is it time to revolutionize the toilet?

    www.aol.com/waste-not-waste-time-revolutionize...

    Change:WATER Labs’ low-cost and entirely waterless portable toilet, dubbed the “iThrone,” stores human waste in a pouch lined with the proprietary material.

  9. Philip Haas (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Haas_(Inventor)

    The Romans had toilets that conveyed away waste with running water. In the 1590s, Englishman, Sir John Harington (1561–1612) contrived a crude flush toilet. However, Haas' efforts, perhaps more so than those of any other one person, helped transform the toilet from a notoriously unreliable device into the modern commode.