All About Coffee Part 147
You’re reading novel All About Coffee Part 147 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!
1852--Tavernier is granted a French patent on a coffee tablet.
1853--Laca.s.sagne and Latchoud are granted a French patent on liquid and solid extracts of coffee.
1855--C.W. Van Vliet, Fishkill Landing, N.Y., is granted a patent on a household coffee mill employing upper breaking, and lower grinding, cones. a.s.signed to Charles Parker, Meriden, Conn.
1856--Waite and Sener's Old Dominion pot is patented in the United States.
1857--The Newell patents on coffee-cleaning machinery are issued in America. Sixteen patents follow.
1857--George L. Squier, Buffalo, N.Y., begins the manufacture of coffee-plantation machinery.
1859--John Gordon, London, is granted an English patent on a coffee pulper.
1860[L]--Osborn's Celebrated Prepared Java coffee, the pioneer ground-coffee package, is put on the New York market by Lewis A.
Osborn.
1860--Marcus Mason, an American mechanical engineer in San Jose, Costa Rica, invents the Mason pulper and cleaner.
1860--John Walker is granted a patent in England on a disk pulper for pulping Arabian coffee.
1860--Alexius Van Gulpen begins the manufacture of a green-coffee-grading machine at Emmerich, Germany.
1861--An import duty of four cents a pound on coffee is imposed by the United States as a war-revenue measure.
1862--The import duty on coffee in the United States is increased to five cents a pound.
1862--The first paper-bag factory in the United States, making bags for loose coffee, begins operation in Brooklyn.
1862--E.J. Hyde, Philadelphia, is granted a United States patent on a combined coffee roaster and stove, fitted with a crane on which the roasting cylinder is revolved and swung out horizontally from the stove.
1864--Jabez Burns, New York, is granted a United States patent on the Burns coffee roaster, the first machine that did not have to be moved away from the fire for discharging the roasted coffee--marking a distinct advance in the manufacture of coffee-roasting apparatus.
1864--James Henry Thompson. Hoboken, and John Lidgerwood, Morristown, N.J., are granted an English patent on a coffee-hulling machine.
1865--John Arbuckle introduces to the trade at Pittsburgh roasted coffee in individual packages, the forerunner of the Ariosa package.
1866--William Van Vleek Lidgerwood, American charge d'affaires, Rio de Janeiro, is granted an English patent on a coffee-hulling-and-cleaning machine.
1867--Jabez Burns is granted United States patents on a coffee cooler, a coffee mixer, and a grinding mill, or granulator.
1868--Thomas Page, New York, begins the manufacture of a pull-out coffee roaster similar to the Carter machine.
1868--Alexius Van Gulpen, in partners.h.i.+p with J.H. Lensing and Theodore von Gimborn, begins the manufacture of coffee-roasting machines at Emmerich, Germany.
1868--E.B. Manning, Middletown, Conn., patents his tea-and-coffee pot in the United States.
1868--John Arbuckle is granted a United States patent for a roasted-coffee coating consisting of Irish moss, isingla.s.s, gelatin, sugar, and eggs.
1869--elie Moneuse and L. Duparquet, New York, are granted three United States patents on a coffee pot, or urn, formed of sheet copper and lined with pure sheet block tin.
1869--B.G. Arnold, New York, engineers the first large green-coffee speculation; his success as an operator winning for him the t.i.tle of King of the Coffee Trade.
1869--Henry E. Smyser, a.s.signor to the Weikel & Smith Spice Co., Philadelphia, is granted his first United States patent on a spice box used also for coffee.
1869--Licenses to sell coffee in London are abolished.
1869--The coffee-leaf disease is first noticed in Ceylon.
1870--John Gulick Baker, Philadelphia, one of the founders of the Enterprise Manufacturing Co. of Pennsylvania, is granted a patent on a coffee grinder introduced to the trade by the Enterprise Manufacturing Co. as its Champion No. 1 mill.
1870--Delephine, Sr., Marourme, is granted a French patent on a tubular coffee roaster that turns over the flame.
1870--Alexius Van Gulpen, Emmerich, Germany, brings out a globular coffee roaster having perforations and an exhauster.
1870--Thos. Smith & Son, Glasgow, Scotland, (Elkington & Co., successors), begin the manufacture of the Napierian vacuum coffee-making machines for brewing coffee by distillation.
1870--First United States trade-mark for essence of coffee is registered by Butler, Earhart & Co., Columbus, Ohio.
1870--The first coffee-valorization enterprise in Brazil results in failure.
1871--J.W. Gillies, New York, is granted two patents in the United States for roasting and treating coffee by subjecting it to an intervening cooling operation.
1871--First United States trade-mark for coffee is issued to Butler, Earhart & Co., Columbus, Ohio, for Buckeye, first used 1870.
1871--G.W. Hungerford is granted United States patents on coffee-cleaning-and-polis.h.i.+ng machines.
1871--The import duty on coffee in the United States is reduced to three cents a pound.
1872--Jabez Burns, New York, is granted a United States patent on an improved coffee-granulating mill. Another in 1874.
1872--J. Guardiola, Chocola, Guatemala, is granted his first United States patents on a coffee pulper and a coffee drier.
1872--The import duty on coffee in the United States is repealed.
1872--Robert Hewitt, Jr., New York, publishes the first American work on coffee, _Coffee: Its History, Cultivation, and Uses_.
1873--J.G. Baker, Philadelphia, a.s.signor of the Enterprise Manufacturing Co. of Pennsylvania, is granted a United States patent on a grinding mill later known to the trade as Enterprise Champion Globe No. 0.
1873--Marcus Mason begins the manufacture of coffee-plantation machinery in the United States.
1873--Ariosa, first successful national brand of package coffee is put on the United States market by John Arbuckle of Pittsburgh.
(Registered 1900.)
1873--H.C. Lockwood, Baltimore, is granted a United States patent on a coffee package made of paper and lined with tin-foil, with false bottom and top.
1873--The first international syndicate to control coffee is organized in Frankfort, Germany, by the German Trading Company, and operates successfully for eight years.
1873--The Jay Cooke stock-market panic causes the price of Rios in the New York market to drop from twenty-four cents to fifteen cents in one day.
All About Coffee Part 147
You're reading novel All About Coffee Part 147 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.
All About Coffee Part 147 summary
You're reading All About Coffee Part 147. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: William H. Ukers already has 676 views.
It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.
LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com
- Related chapter:
- All About Coffee Part 146
- All About Coffee Part 148