Benjamin Chew Tilghman

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Benjamin Chew Tilghman (1821 - 1903) was an US soldier and inventor. He is best known as the inventor of the process of sandblasting.

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[edit] Early life

He was born in Philadelphia on October 26, 1821, the third child of Benjamin and Anne Marie (McMurtie). His father was descended from Richard Tilghman, a surgeon in the British Navy.

Tilghman was educated at Bristol College and later at the University of Pennsylvania from where he graduated in 1839; while he studied law, he never practiced this profession. With his brother, Richard, he spent much time before the war journeying through Europe, visiting laboratories, chemical works and mills.[1]

[edit] Civil War career

During the American Civil War, he served on the Union side, first as as Colonel and commander of the 29th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, then as Colonel and commander of the 3rd United States Colored Troops.[2] He was severely wounded at the Battle of Chancellorsville in 1863[3] He was brevetted Brigadier General, US Volunteers on April 13, 1865 for "meritorious services".


[edit] Invention of the sandblasting process

Legend has it that Tilghman had seen the effect of wind-blown sand on windows in the desert while a general in the army, and that this was the basis of his sandblasting invention.

Around 1870, he invented the Sandblasting process and filed a patent for it in the U.S. (US patent 104,408), detailing many of the applications for which this technique is uniquely suited, such as sharpening files, engraving bottles, cleaning boilers or bringing out the grain in wood. Later that year a patent was issued in the UK.

In 1871, at the 40th Exhibition of the American Institute of the City of New York, he was awarded the institute's Great Medal of Honor for his invention; shortly after, he was also awarded the Elliott Cresson Medal by the Franklin Institute[4].

He refined the technique for various purposes, and in 1877 took out a patent (US patent 252,279) for sharpening files, which he marketed as "Liquid Gridnstone".

Further patents and developments followed.

[edit] Commercial ventures

His first company was formed with his brother in Philadelphia - B. C. & R. A. Tilghman - for the production of chilled iron shot for the stone industry. Around 1879, Benjamin moved to London forming a new company, Tilghman's Patent Sand Blast Co. at Gray's Inn Road. This company used one of his patent methods for sharpening files and rasps. From London he moved to Sheffield, the centre of steel production in England at the time, and later moved to Altrincham in Cheshire, being resident there around 1885, having invested in the machine tool company "George Richards Ltd".

In 1879 he opened the gates of his new works in Altrincham, which became the hub of the sand blasting industry in Great Britain. This lastly formed company, now called Wheelabrator Tilghman, still exists.

[edit] Other inventions

While working on the sandblasting process, he was also engaged in the working of stone, which caused him to invent a production method for iron shot - pouring a stream of molten metal onto a revolving surface, from which the globlues would be propelled into cold water (US patent 187,239, 1872). This material was in great demand for the cutting of stone.

Around 1880, he invented the sulfite method of fiber reduction for paper production [5]; this was a critical part of the production of paper from wood pulp, competing with the Kraft process.

He also patented a design for a torpedo to be propelled "rocket fashion" by a slow burning powder. It was not successful.[6]

He died on July 3, 1901, and is buried in Philadelphia, USA.

[edit] Known Patents

  • UK Patent no. 2147 (1870) - sandblasting
  • UK Patent no. 2900 (1870) - blast wheel
  • UK Patent no. 13,510 (1885) - roughening iron and steel rolls

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ "A tribute"
  2. ^ Find-A-Grave biography
  3. ^ "A tribute", page 1
  4. ^ "A tribute", page 3
  5. ^ "Studies in the Land", page 83
  6. ^ "A tribute", citing the National Cyclopedia of American Biography

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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