- Thomas Willson
Thomas Leopold "Carbide" Willson (
March 14 ,1860 –December 20 ,1915 ) was a Canadianinventor .He was born on a farm near
Princeton, Ontario in 1860 and went to school inHamilton, Ontario . By the age of 21, he had designed and patented the first electricarc lamp s used in Hamilton. He moved to theUnited States in search of opportunities to sell his ideas.In 1892, he discovered an economically viable process for creating
calcium carbide , which is used in the production ofacetylene gas. In 1895, he sold his patent toUnion Carbide .In the same year, he married Mary Parks in California and moved back to Canada. He built a house for his mother in Woodstock, Ontario in 1895. During the years 1900 and 1901, he moved to
Ottawa and opened carbide plants inMerritton, Ontario ,Shawinigan, Quebec and Ottawa. In 1911, he founded theInternational Marine Signal Company to manufacture marinebuoy s andlighthouse beacons.In 1907 he built a summer house on
Meech Lake in what is nowGatineau Park . (The house is now owned by the federal government, and notable for being the site of negotiations on theMeech Lake Accord ). He began experimenting with the condensation ofphosphoric acid in the manufacture offertilizer s at a mill on Meech Creek within the park.In 1915, he died of a heart attack in
New York City while trying to raise funds for ahydroelectric project inLabrador . His dream was finally realized in 1974 as theChurchill Falls project.External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=7775 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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