Online Encyclopedia

JOHN ROEBUCK (1718-1794)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 451 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN ROEBUCK (1718-1794)  ,
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English inventor, was born in 1718 at Sheffield, where his
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father had a prosperous manufacturing business . After attending the grammar school at Sheffield and Dr Philip Doddridge's academy at Northampton, he studied
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medicine at
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Edinburgh, where he was imbued with a taste for chemistry by the lectures of William Cullen and Joseph Black, and he finally graduated M.D. at
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Leiden in 1742 . He started practice at
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Birmingham, but devoted much of his time to chemistry, especially in its
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practical applications . Among the most important of his early achievements in this field was the introduction, in 1746, of leaden condensing chambers for use in the manufacture of sulphuric acid . Together with
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Samuel Garbett he erected a factory at
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Prestonpans, near,Edinburgh, for the production of the acid in 1749, and for some years enjoyed a monopoly; but ultimately his methods became known, and, having omitted to take out
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patents for them at the proper time, he 'was unable to restrain others from making use of them . Engaging next in the manufacture of iron, he in 176o established the ironworks which still exist at Carron, in
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Stirlingshire . There he introduced various improvements in the methods of production, including the conversion (patented in 1762) of cast iron into malleable iron " by the
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action of a hollow pit-
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coal fire " urged by a powerful artificial blast . His next enterprise was less successful . He leased a colliery at Bo'ness to supply coal to the Carron
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works, but in sinking for new seams encountered such quantities of
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water that the Newcomen engine which he used was unable to keep the pit clear . In this difficulty he heard of James Watt's engine and entered into communication with its inventor . This engine, then at an early stage of its development, also proved in-adequate, but Roebuck became a strong believer in its future and in return for a two-thirds share in the invention assisted Watt in perfecting its details . His troubles at the colliery, however, aggravated by the failure of an attempt to manufacture
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alkali, brought him into pecuniary straits, and he parted with his share in Watt's engine to Matthew Boulton in return for the cancellation of a debt of £1200 which he owed the latter .

Subsequently, though he had to give up his

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interest in the Bo'ness works, he continued to
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manage them and to reside at the neighbouring Kinneil House, where he occupied himself with farming on a considerable scale . He died on the 17th of
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July 1794 .

End of Article: JOHN ROEBUCK (1718-1794)
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