"Sucking out dust is impossible. It has been tried over and over without success... " John S. Thurman, inventor
In 1901 mechanical engineer Hubert Cecil Booth ( 1871-1955 ) watched a railway carriage being cleaned at St. Pancras Station in London by a series of high-pressure hose using compressed air to blow away debris. During with friends afterward, he impulsively covered his mouth against the cover of his cloth chair and inhaled, trapping dust against the outer lining of the handkerchief. Convincing himself that a device using reverse pressure and equipped with a filter would effectively capture and store dust, he set about creating a cleaning machine using suction rather than simply blowing particles into the air.
Booth's Puffing Billy machine of 1901 was successful because it had an effective source of power |
Together with his friend F.R. Simms, who designed a water-cooled, six-horsepower piston engine driven by an electric motor, to which Booth attacked a simple vacuum pump, he produced the world's first electric vacuum cleaner. Booth set up the Booth Vacuum Company and began a cleaning service. However, with few Victorian homes and businesses having the luxury of electricity, his machine needed to be mobile. He parked his carriage, which he named Puffing Billy, on the street with hoses passed in through the windows of his clients' premises. He used transparent tubes so that skeptical onlookers could witness the dust particles being drawn into his machine.
His invention proved such a success that he gained aa commission to clean the ceremonial carpets in London's Westminster Abbey prior to the coronation of King Edward VII in 1902. The king was so impressed he gave Booth a royal warrant to provide vacuum cleaners to Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace.
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