Lighting Then VS Now: Fire Before Electricity

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We take lighting for granted we walk  into a room in the dark we turn on   the light and amazing things happen. If that light switch doesn't work if   the lights don't come on the room  is dead it's impossible to use.  In the 18th and 19th century lighting  was incredibly difficult and important.  The lighting industry and the trades related to  that were a big economic driver they created a   lot of jobs and a lot of taxation. It doesn't  matter whether you the poorest person or the   richest person there were three main sources  of light you had light from open fires like   fire places and some people that was the only  light they might have in their home at night.  And then there are oil lamps you can  have all kinds of different simple   oil lamps and very very expensive oil lamps. And then the classic the one we think about   all the time candles and candles are a  very special kind of light source they   are actually a technological innovation the  candle topic today is very interesting because   candles are extremely popular today but most  people enjoy candles because of their scent   or because of the atmosphere they bring But in the 18th century candles were a   tool like a flashlight might be a tool. Now yes some people were using very very   high-end expensive candles and in other people the  lowest possible cheapest candle you can imagine.  The very richest people can afford these amazing  candles from the 18th century spermaceti candles   made from the spermaceti from sperm whales that  candle was the quintessential candle a beautiful   white bright flame didn't smoke smelled great and  these candles were the candles that candle power   is based on even today when we rate a lighting  source and how bright it is we talk about candle   power that's based on the spermaceti candle. Most rich people are using beeswax candles   they are a very expensive candle for the time  period wax isn't as easy to come by and in Great   Britain they were a taxed item so these beeswax  candles are expensive again they smell great   they put out a great flame and a lot of light. But for the poor in the working class the standard   working candle was the tallow candle and a tallow  candle is made from the suet or tallow from oxen   and from sheep usually mixed together in a 50  50 percentage and this created an inexpensive   candle that would work well but only really in  cooler temperatures beef tallow really starts   to break down at about 100° if you get to maybe  90 or even 95 the candle starts to bend even in   my hand this candle is starting to melt they're  very delicate candles they do work well for a   while they can burn rather quickly and the candle  wick has to be in the very center of the candle   or this candle really starts to fail rapidly. A lot of people make their own candles today   and when we think about this poor working  class person let's say in Great Britain we   think they're probably going to be making  their own candles. Even if they don't have   molds they could make simple dip candles right? Guess what? It was illegal in Great Britain to   make candles in your own home unless you had a  license there was a law created in 1709 that made   it illegal to make your own candles and they were  taxing candles because there was a war at the time   they wanted to fund this war and so they decided  they would tax candles and candle wax for that   purpose. The war ended in 1711 just 2 years later  the tax didn't disappear for another 120 years.  Not only did it regulate candles but it also  regulated what you could use for an oil lamp   so the next best thing people would use an oil  lamp well it regulated the kind of oil you could   use in your oil lamp. In Great Britain at the time  rush lights were popular because it was an untaxed   light source and these were um a rush that was  dipped in a maybe hogs lard or something like that   and they did not burn very well they didn't create  very much light and they smoked a lot but it was   a very inexpensive light source and interestingly  enough rush lights never got to be popular in the   colonies why because their candles weren't taxed. The fuel of the candle the wax or tallow is only   a single component the important  part of a candle is the wick.  We think of wicks as a very simple kind of a  string that goes through a candle and in the   18th century they were simply a kind of string  but there's a lot more to a candle wick than   that if you look closely at a modern candle wick  it is braided and it's a flat braid and if you   knew exactly how it was manufactured it's a little  tighter on one side than the other so they braid   it very very carefully this was an innovation in  the 1830s and 40s when they were really working   on the candle technology when braided in that way  as the candle burns the wick starts to curve over   and make a little curve at the top that makes  it so the wick is only a very particular length   you only want that Wick to be about a 1/4 of  an inch or 38 of an inch long if it gets any   longer than that it'll get a smoky end to it  and it will start to get too hot and it will   melt all the wax too quickly it wants to create  a pool of liquid wax just the right size so that   it doesn't run over the top and then you lose  that liquid wax. So this simple string in the   18th century candle because because it wasn't  braided yet it would burn too tall and it would   cause too much heat on the candle the candle would  melt instantly it would gutter and it would ruin   somebody had to go around and trim the wicks  on your candle so there was special scissors   with a little box that would hold the burning  wick you don't see these anymore because we   don't need them for our modern wicks but that's  a standard tool there were a lot of them in the   18th century every rich household that used lots  of candles would have someone like a servant go   around trimming the Wicks on the candles. And when I say fuel for the candle I mean   the tallow or the wax and if we think about  what's going on here with the candle it's it's   an amazing innovation here the candle by itself  burns it holds its flame what's happening is is   this solid fuel the tallow or the wax is creating  a liquid pool like a pool of oil but what's really   burning in the candle is a gas form of that same  oil so we have all three forms of that fuel the   solid on the outside the liquid and then the gas  as it goes and burns at the wick itself and the   wick isn't really burning so much but the gas of  the oil that's where the flame is coming from.  There were even scientific papers from the time  uh pages and pages of study about what's going   on exactly with the flame of the candle there  are all these air currents that are happening   around in that it's very interesting that this  was the beginning of scientific innovation and   this is one of the places they started to study. There were three main methods of making candles in   the 18th century we are all familiar with candle  molds and making candles and that was probably   the main way of making at least high-end  candles for the time period they had molds   especially the more industrial candle making  in in Great Britain they had special kind of   modular mold so that they would make a candle  they could make many many candles at once and   they had a special tray that would hold them  together we're more familiar with the simple   six or eight style candle mold that's probably  something it's more like a colonial candle mold   design for somebody making candles at home. There are also dipped candles and a lot of   dipping is going on even in an industrial kind  of way someone's sitting over a pot of molten wax   and they are dipping wicks over and over letting  them cool dipping them again and slowly building   up a layer of candle wax on the outside of those.  Many times those are misshapen and those sorts of   candles have to be rolled out and flattened. And then a style that we don't think about   much today and that is a method of pouring the  wax over the top of these Wicks to create that   candle again these made very misshapen looking  candles and they had special rolling tables   that they would roll those out flat and they  would make thousands and thousands of candles.  While most people could afford some kind of  candle at times oil lamps were extremely popular   and oil lamps could burn something as simple  as waste oils from the kitchen something like   bacon grease yes it made a smoky smelly fire  but it was a lot less expensive than candles.  In Britain even what was burned in your oil lamp  was regulated you couldn't burn tallow in your oil   lamp you had to burn a different kind of waste  oil from the kitchen. So there were multiple   different kinds of simple oil lamps some of them  nothing more than a a simple metal tray with a   little bit of a spout edge to it and you would  just lay a wick in there pour your oil in and   light that and it would work this simple one has  four different spouts so you could light all four   to get a little more light some of the oil lamps  in the 18th century had a better design they had   an internal spout that kept the oil from dripping  off the side and so something like a a Betty lamp   like this one would be much more desirable but  more expensive. Very simple oil lamps like this   are typical for not just the 18th century but they  are thousands of years old because lighting was in   such demand it created a lot of Industry around it  not just the candle makers but people that had to   make all the vessels for burning oil lamps might  be made out of iron they might be made out of tin   or copper or even pottery and lanterns you really  can't use a candle or even an oil lamp in any sort   of situation where there's any wind at all unless  you have a lantern so there are some people who   are directly connected with lighting people that  go around lighting street lamps at night in the   18th century having to go and trim the wicks or  clean the globes on your street lamps and street   lighting was a very important thing it really  started to be an important industry in France in   the 17th century Great Britain takes on the idea  of street lighting in London in the 18th century   and they have special globed oil lamps that have  to be lit and then cleaned constantly Benjamin   Franklin sees the problem of the lamps lighting  the streets in London in 1750s he wants street   lighting to happen in Philadelphia and so he comes  up with a new lantern design that won't smoke the   glass so it's a special oil lamp that you can  have for the street lights in Philadelphia.   Speaking of Street lighting I grew up around here  and there's a city Wabash Indiana it's just a few   miles south we drive through it all the time and  they have a sign they're famous for being the   first electrically lighted city and how did they  light their city? In the 1880s they suspended four   electric Ark lamps from the courthouse roof to  light up the city and it was amazing. Lighting   affected blacksmiths and potters and tinsmiths  and coppersmiths and all the people that had to   deal with making the candles themselves but that  wasn't it that fuel had to come from someplace   so beekeepers are important along with butchers  they are harvesting and separating out all the   tallow that makes the tallow candles and then as  we go into the 18th century the whaling industry   becomes incredibly important spermaceti for  spermaceti candles whale oil is important   way up all the way into the 19th century for  lighting. There's so much about lighting and   candles in the 18th century is a very deep topic This is a tallow candle that I made it's 100%   Tallow and I don't know exactly how it's going  to burn but we're going to try this candle out   all the other candles we've been burning here  are different kinds of wax mostly beeswax but   here's our tallow candle I can't believe  how well this is burning it's great to be   able to get in there and make a candle  just like they did in the 18th century.
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Channel: Townsends
Views: 955,872
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: townsends, jas townsend and son, reenacting, history, 18th century, 19th century, jon townsend, 18th century cooking
Id: Yva2RpQrWQs
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Length: 13min 22sec (802 seconds)
Published: Sun Jan 14 2024
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