Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal for Iron and Steel Manufacturers, Metallurgists, Mine Proprietors, Engineers, Shipbuilders, Scientists, Capitalists ..., Volume 17Perry Fairfax Nursey Knight and Lacey, 1832 - Industrial arts |
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Page 9
... letter below was the precursor of what then took place , and would more appropriately have pre- ceded than followed it in your pages ; but I considered it more essential to fur- nish the facts at once , than to wait and lose valuable ...
... letter below was the precursor of what then took place , and would more appropriately have pre- ceded than followed it in your pages ; but I considered it more essential to fur- nish the facts at once , than to wait and lose valuable ...
Page 12
... Letter of a Belgian Traveller to a Friend at Brussels ; and translated by the latter for the Me- chanics ' Magazine . ) " The progress of national industry is a subject , as you , my friend , are aware , which is too near my heart , for ...
... Letter of a Belgian Traveller to a Friend at Brussels ; and translated by the latter for the Me- chanics ' Magazine . ) " The progress of national industry is a subject , as you , my friend , are aware , which is too near my heart , for ...
Page 23
... letters I recent ly have from him ) , in the most distin- guished manner at Philadelphia - the very seat of these ... letter is honourable to the zeal of the writer in behalf of his ab- sent friend ; we should have been very glad had ...
... letters I recent ly have from him ) , in the most distin- guished manner at Philadelphia - the very seat of these ... letter is honourable to the zeal of the writer in behalf of his ab- sent friend ; we should have been very glad had ...
Page 43
... letter he refers . We differ entirely from Mr. G. on both points , and look upon Mr. Gra- ham's letter as a very self - interested and fallacious production . At present , how- ever , we have not time to go at large into the questions ...
... letter he refers . We differ entirely from Mr. G. on both points , and look upon Mr. Gra- ham's letter as a very self - interested and fallacious production . At present , how- ever , we have not time to go at large into the questions ...
Page 44
... letter , and the evidence before adduced as to the wear of other locomotive carriages , we must conclude that such carriages could , not cost £ 1500 per ann . each , as we are well informed the repair of those on the Liverpool and ...
... letter , and the evidence before adduced as to the wear of other locomotive carriages , we must conclude that such carriages could , not cost £ 1500 per ann . each , as we are well informed the repair of those on the Liverpool and ...
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Common terms and phrases
advantages apparatus appears applied ascer axle boat bottom BROWN'S GAS Cajeput oil carriage cause centre circulation cistern or boiler coal colour comet common construction contrivance correspondent cottage course CROYDON CANAL cylinder Davy lamp DIAK diameter drawing effect ELI WHITNEY engine England English equal experiments feet fire Fleet Street fluid friction fulcrum gas vacuum give ground heat improvement inches invention iron Journal Junius labour lever Liverpool locomotion London machine machinery Magazine manufacture means Mechanics ment metal miles mode motion naval architecture object observed obtained octant paper patent persons piece pipe plane plate present principle produced purpose quantity racter Railway rattlesnake readers remarks Saint Augustin Saxula screw side sluice Society steam sufficient sugar suppose surface thing tion tube VACUUM ENGINE vessel weight wheel whole Wootz steel
Popular passages
Page 229 - M'Culloch. — A Dictionary, Practical, Theoretical, and Historical, of Commerce and Commercial Navigation. Illustrated with Maps and Plans.
Page 341 - Each robber chief upheld his armed halls, Doing his evil will, nor less elate Than mightier heroes of a longer date. What want these outlaws conquerors should have? But History's purchased page to call them great? A wider space, an ornamented grave? Their hopes were not less warm, their souls were full as brave.
Page 248 - Having now described the nature of my invention, and the manner in which the same is to be performed, I would have it understood that I lay no claim to the various parts...
Page 427 - State in which he had first made and where he had first introduced his machine, and which had derived the. most signal benefits from it, he had received nothing; and from no State had he received the amount of half a cent per pound on the cotton cleaned with his machines in one year. Estimating the value...
Page 275 - Fig. 138. Fig. 139. Fig. 140. Fig. 141. Fig. 142. Fig. 143. Fig. 144. Fig. 145. Fig. 146. Fig. 147. Fig. 148. Fig. 149. Fig. 150. Fig. 151. Fig. 152. Fig. 153. Fig. 154. Fig. 155.
Page 420 - This gave my brother an opportunity of learning the use of tools when very _ young. He .lost no time; but as soon as he could handle tools, he was always making something in the shop, and seemed not to like working on the farm.
Page 425 - Whitney to pay all their debts, and divide something between them. It establishes a precedent which will be valuable as it respects our collections in other States, and I think there is now a fair prospect that I shall in the event realize property enough to render me comfortable, and...
Page 422 - This he carried home, and set himself to work with such rude materials and instruments as a Georgia plantation afforded. With these resources, however, he made tools better suited to his purpose, and drew his own wire, of which the teeth of the earliest gins were made, which...
Page 429 - And then, as to the effect on society, the machine, it is true, operates, in the first instance, on mere physical elements, to produce an accumulation and distribution of property. But do not all the arts of civilization follow in the train?
Page 424 - ... my exertions, and all the money I can earn or borrow, to encompass and complete the business we have undertaken ; and if fortune should, by any future disaster, deny us the boon we ask, we will at least deserve it. It shall never be said that we have lost an object which a little perseverance could have attained. I think, indeed, it will be very extraordinary, if two young men, in the prime of life, with some share of ingenuity, with a little knowledge of the world, a great deal of industry,...