William Bickford (1774–1834)

William Bickford (1774–1834) was an English inventor, who, formerly a currier, invented the safety fuse for use in mining.

William Bickford
Born1774
Died1834 (aged 60)
NationalityBritish
OccupationInventor, currier
Known forBeing the inventor of the safety fuse used in mining operations
RelativesWilliam Bickford-Smith (grandson)

Early life

William Bickford was born in Ashburton, Devon, England, United Kingdom to William and Mary Bickford.[1] He moved to first Truro and then Tuckingmill in Cornwall. Tuckingmill was then in the heart of the Cornish mining industry, and Bickford would have been aware of the large loss of life from explosive accidents in the mines.

Inventor career

He is best known as the inventor of the safety fuse, which was inspired by watching a friend, James Bray making rope. With his son-in-law George Smith, he established a factory in Tuckingmill for the production of his invention, and in its first year it produced 45 miles of fuse. He died a short while before his company actually started up. It took a while for miners to use the safety fuses, for the old ones were cheaper. His company eventually became part of the Ensign-Bickford Company.

On the south side of the main street, at the bottom of Tuckingmill, set in a wall, was (certainly prior to 1990) an inscribed stone which amongst other things credited his daughter with the inspiration/possible invention of the safety fuse.

Bickford's grandson William Bickford-Smith became MP for Truro.

Death

Bickford died in 1834.

gollark: I mean, what are they meant to do, sell it with "4 cores", one of which doesn't work, or throw away the slightly broken ones?
gollark: Intel and AMD and probably all or almost of the ARM manufacturers do that though.
gollark: I don't see how that's a problem. You shouldn't really expect to get an extra working core if it's disabled.
gollark: Broken components? Isn't that talking about it being possible to enable extra cores?
gollark: Anyway, I don't know what this has to do with their current products.

References


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