E. Deguingand & Son: Difference between revisions

From Pipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Added page for E. Deguingand & Son)
 
No edit summary
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Emile Deguingand & Son, Ltd. was a briar pipe maker in London at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries.  Originally they manufactured pipes in London, on Hamsell Street in Cripplegate, but that entire area was destroyed in the fire of 1897. Deguingand began selling at 5 Colonial Avenue, Minories, East London beginning in 1897.  That same year Emile Deguingand purchased a pipe factory built by Charles Cayron in 1885 and 1886 at a place called Sur les Etapes in St. Claude, France.  The factory in St. Claude was raised and enlarged in 1900 and 1902. 
[[File:FR 360466 A.png|thumb|Patent FR 360466 A]]


In 1906 Deguingand was granted a patent in France for a pipe consisting of a removable combustion chamber over a lower chamber filled with asbestos into which the airway ran.
'''Emile Deguingand & Son''', Ltd. was a briar pipe maker at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries.


In 1910, E. Deguingand & Son, known in France as E. Deguingand et Fils, became S.A. des anciens Etablissements Deguingand et Fils with Francis and Paul Deguingand's entry into the business.  While the plant doubled in size in approximately 1926, it was closed around 1930 and later converted to a commercial warehouse.
== London, Great Britain ==
Originally they manufactured pipes in London, on Hamsell Street in Cripplegate, but that entire area was destroyed in the fire of 1897. Deguingand began selling at 5 Colonial Avenue, Minories, East London beginning in 1897.


One pipe line known to have been sold by Deguingand was the Trident.
== Saint-Claude, France ==
That same year Emile Deguingand purchased a pipe factory built by Charles Cayron in 1885 and 1886 at a place called Sur les Etapes in [[Saint-Claude]], France. The factory in Saint-Claude was raised and enlarged in 1900 and 1902. In 1910, E. Deguingand & Son, known in France as E. Deguingand et Fils, became S.A. des anciens Etablissements Deguingand et Fils with Francis and Paul Deguingand's entry into the business. While the plant doubled in size in approximately 1926, it was closed around 1930 and later converted to a commercial warehouse.
 
== Pipes ==
One pipe line known to have been sold by Deguingand was the Trident. Another one was the [[Admiral]].<ref>At least this is what the [[Admiral]] page says. Citation required though.</ref>
 
== Patent ==
In 1906 Deguingand was granted a patent in France (FR 360466 A) for a pipe consisting of a removable combustion chamber over a lower chamber filled with asbestos into which the airway ran.<ref>https://patents.google.com/patent/FR360466A/en</ref>
 
== References ==
<references />


[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]]
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]]
[[Category: Great Britain]]
[[Category: Great Britain]]
[[Category: France]]
[[Category: Patent]]
__NOTOC__

Latest revision as of 10:31, 23 December 2020

Patent FR 360466 A

Emile Deguingand & Son, Ltd. was a briar pipe maker at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries.

London, Great Britain

Originally they manufactured pipes in London, on Hamsell Street in Cripplegate, but that entire area was destroyed in the fire of 1897. Deguingand began selling at 5 Colonial Avenue, Minories, East London beginning in 1897.

Saint-Claude, France

That same year Emile Deguingand purchased a pipe factory built by Charles Cayron in 1885 and 1886 at a place called Sur les Etapes in Saint-Claude, France. The factory in Saint-Claude was raised and enlarged in 1900 and 1902. In 1910, E. Deguingand & Son, known in France as E. Deguingand et Fils, became S.A. des anciens Etablissements Deguingand et Fils with Francis and Paul Deguingand's entry into the business. While the plant doubled in size in approximately 1926, it was closed around 1930 and later converted to a commercial warehouse.

Pipes

One pipe line known to have been sold by Deguingand was the Trident. Another one was the Admiral.[1]

Patent

In 1906 Deguingand was granted a patent in France (FR 360466 A) for a pipe consisting of a removable combustion chamber over a lower chamber filled with asbestos into which the airway ran.[2]

References

  1. At least this is what the Admiral page says. Citation required though.
  2. https://patents.google.com/patent/FR360466A/en