- A
Bude-
Light was a very
bright oil lamp (later, in its
modified form, a gas lamp)
invented by Sir
Goldsworthy Gurney,
patented by him on 8 June 1839 and...
-
Bude (/bjuːd/,
locally /buːd/ or /bɛwd/;
Standard Written Form: Porthbud) is a
seaside town in
north Cornwall, England,
United Kingdom, in the
civil parish...
- and
later applied its
principles to a
novel form of illumination, the
Bude-
Light;
developed a
series of
early steam-powered road vehicles; and laid claim—still...
-
Guillaume Budé (1467–1540), a
French scholar Bude-
Light, an oil lamp
named after the
English town
Bude Canal Bude railway station This
disambiguation page...
-
William Congreve, 2nd
Baronet as
general manager. The 1839 invention, the
Bude-
Light,
provided a
brighter and more
economical lamp. Oil-gas
appeared in the...
-
eliminating the need for
complicated mechanisms to feed the fuel to the burner.
Bude-
Light: a very
bright vegetable oil lamp that
works by
introducing oxygen into...
-
gentleman scientist and
surgeon Sir
Goldsworthy Gurney, who
invented the
Bude-
Light,
lived in
Wadebridge from 1814 to 1820. A
street (Goldsworthy Way) has...
- with the
utmost safety.
Gurney went on to
employ the
principles in his
Bude light. In gl****blowing, the term
blowpipe refers to a pipe used to blow a bubble...
- concrete, and were
unveiled in 1989. "The
Bude Light",
designed by
Vincent and
Anthony Fanshawe, was
commissioned by
Bude-Stratton Town Council. It was unveiled...
- The Okehampton–
Bude line was a
railway line
built to
serve Holsworthy in Devon, and
Bude on the
Cornish coast near the
Devon border in England. The line...