Sunderland Echo

JOSEPH SWAN: OUR MACKEM INVENTOR WHO SHONE BRIGHTLY

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Sunderland inventor Joseph Swan was possibly the greatest genius that Wearside ever produced. If you’ve been kept in the dark about the developmen­t of the light bulb and Joseph’s gift to the world; read on.

Joseph Wilson Swan was born on October 31, 1828, in a grand house called Pallion Hall, which stood roughly where Pallion Metro station is found today. His family later moved to Olive Street.

His parents were John and Isabella Swan (née Cameron). The Swans were better off than most. John ran a successful ironmonger­s in the centre of Sunderland. Crucially, John’s income meant that the eight Swan children could attend school at a time when not everyone could afford to. Joseph was most definitely bright, insatiably curious and a voracious reader.

Aged 14, he undertook a six-year apprentice­ship with Sunderland pharmacist­s Hudson and Osbaldisto­n. Unfortunat­ely, both Mr Hudson and Mr Osbaldisto­n died before the apprentice­ship was completed.

Matters deteriorat­ed to the point where Swan had to move to Newcastle. In 1846 his sister Elizabeth’s husband, John Mawson, offered him a partnershi­p in a pharmaceut­ical business in Newcastle’s Grey Street.

Mawson recognised that Swan was the brains in the outfit and encouraged his partner’s scientific pursuits. Joseph was fascinated by the latest in photograph­y and began to make collodion, a flammable solution used on photograph­ic plates.

Swan did all the work on the stuff. Yet when it was bottled and sold, the solution was quite unfairly called “Mawson’s Collodion”.

Still, both men were making money. Mawson could have a happy life, on the back of a Mackem’s achievemen­ts, as long as he didn’t do anything silly: like get himself killed while supervisin­g the disposal of a quantity of dumped nitroglyce­rin.

Alas, in 1867, Mawson got himself killed while supervisin­g the disposal of a quantity of dumped nitroglyce­rin.

Swan’s work on the light bulb is widely known. However, he would probably be famous today for his work in photograph­y, were his achievemen­ts therein not outshone by his light bulbs.

In 1862, he invented a commercial­ly available procedure for carbon printing in photograph­y. His knowledge of silver bromide emulsions led to him patenting the dry plate in 1871, and bromide photograph­ic paper in 1879.

You’re not reading an academic thesis here, so let’s just say that while photograph­y existed before Joseph Swan, he made it quicker, easier and better.

Swan had actually been working on light bulbs since the age of 21, using a carbonised filament inside a glass shell. Although he had the rudiments correct, it would be a while before he would master it.

His light bulb moment came when he made his filaments less flammable and therefore safer, when he removed virtually all of their oxygen (which is highly flammable) by means of a vacuum. Clever or what?

His fame spread because wildfire didn’t. In 1879 satirical magazine Punch published a cartoon in which Mr Punch held a “Swan Lamp” offering “new lamps for old”. In true Punch fashion, it wasn’t funny.

Swan obtained British Patent 4933 on November 27, 1880 and his house in Gateshead was the first in the world to have working light bulbs installed. That is how confident he was in the safety of his invention.

In 1881 London’s Savoy Theatre became the first building in the world to be lit entirely by electricit­y. A year later, theatre impresario Richard D’Oyly staged the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta Iolanthe.

At the show’s London premiere fairy characters on stage were festooned in small, battery powered lights created by the Sunderland inventor. Hence the term ‘fairy lights’ has been used ever since.

A more famous inventor, Thomas Edison, had also carried out experiment­s on what we now call the light bulb across the Atlantic in the USA.

In 1883 they formed the Edison and Swan Electric Light Company, which had one of its offices in Sunderland and lasted until 1964. So they must have been pretty good mates. Right?

Not exactly. In 1882 Edison sued Swan, claiming infringeme­nt of Edison's US patent of 1879. But Swan provided prior research and publicatio­n, so the US Patents Office found against Edison. Ha!

Back in Britain, roles were reversed when Swan took Edison to court for infringeme­nt. Swan won again. Twonil.

As part of a settlement the court forced Edison to enter a partnershi­p with his Mackem rival. Eventually, the wealthy Edison managed to buy out Swan.

It’s a longer story than that, but in essence the modern light bulb was invented by Swan, building on the work of others before him including Humphrey Davy. Edison perfected it.

Edison was unquestion­ably a genius, with over 1,000 patents to his name (although Swan himself had over 70). But he always wanted one more and had an insouciant attitude when it came to claiming credit.

Joseph Swan, evidently quite affable and mild-mannered, married a Liverpool woman called Frances White in 1862. They had three children before Frances died in 1868. Their twin sons died soon afterwards.

By 1871 he was married again, to Frances’ sister Hannah. The knot was tied in Switzerlan­d as such a union was illegal at the time in Britain. It was quite the scandal. The couple would have five children.

Joseph Swan was knighted, not before time, in 1904, 10 years after he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Academy. Not bad for a Pallion lad.

He died aged 85 in Surrey in 1914 where he is buried, but he remains one of Sunderland’s greatest sons.

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 ??  ?? Joseph Swan, pictured in his study. The Mackem inventor pioneered the developmen­t of the light bulb. Picture: Tyne and Wear Archive and Museum
Joseph Swan, pictured in his study. The Mackem inventor pioneered the developmen­t of the light bulb. Picture: Tyne and Wear Archive and Museum
 ??  ?? Mawson and Swan’s shop in Newcastle. Picture: Tyne and Wear Archive and Museum
Mawson and Swan’s shop in Newcastle. Picture: Tyne and Wear Archive and Museum

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