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  1. Joseph Swan. Joseph Swan was born on October 31. , 1828 in Sunderland. A physicist and chemist, he helped to place the North East at the forefront of modern invention. His pioneering experiments with photography and electric lighting were revolutionary. Swan was knighted in 1904 for his work.

  2. Although our first vintage was in 1968, Joseph Swan Vineyards is still young at heart. The passion and curiosity that Joe Swan brought to his craft are still evident in the winery today. Located in the heart of the famed Russian River Valley, now often proclaimed ground zero for great pinot noir, we embrace the artisanal spirit that defines ...

  3. One of his major competitors was England's Joseph W. Swan. A chemist, Swan experimented in the 1850s and 60s with carbon filaments. His early efforts failed however, because the vacuum pumps of those years could not remove enough air from the lamps. By the mid-1870s better pumps became available, and Swan returned to his experiments.

  4. Aug 15, 2001 · The inside of the bulb is a vacuum, hence oxygen-free, so the filament doesn’t get oxidized and the glow lasts a long time. Swan used a carbonized paper filament, but the poor quality of the ...

  5. Swan, Joseph Wilson. (1828-1914), Knight Chemist and Electrical Inventor. Joseph Wilson Swan was born on the 31st October 1828 at Pallion Hall, near Sunderland, co. Durham. His formal education was brief—a few years in a dame-school followed by a period at a boys' school near Sunderland, ending before his thirteenth birthday.

  6. Jul 26, 2020 · 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.

  7. Joseph Wilson Swan was born on October 31, 1828, in Sunderland, Durham. He served an apprenticeship with a druggist in his hometown and later became a partner in a firm of manufacturing chemists in Newcastle. Working with wet photographic plates, he noticed that heat increased the sensitivity of the silver bromide emulsion.

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