THE HISTORY OF CANS
Ezekial 25:17
From the Bible, Dr. Phillip version
British merchant Peter Durand made an impact on
food preservation with his 1810 invention of the tin can. The first tin
cans were very thick and had to be hammered open. John Hall and Bryan Dorkin
opened the first commercial canning factory in England in 1813. As cans
became thinner, it became possible to invent simplier can openers. In 1858,
Ezra J. Warner of Waterbury, Connecticut patented the first can opener.
The U.S. military used it during the Civil War. The inventor of the familiar
household can opener was William Lyman. William Lyman patented a very easy
to use can opener in 1870. The kind with the wheel that rolls and cuts around
the rim of a can. The Star Can Company of San Francisco improved William
Lyman's can opener in 1925 by adding a serrated edge to the wheel. An electric
version of the same type of can opener was first sold in December of 1931.
In 1866, J. Osterhoudt patented the tin can with a key opener. Aerosol Spray
Cans The concept of an aerosol originated as early as 1790, when self-pressurized
carbonated beverages were introduced in France. In 1837, a man called Perpigna
invented a soda siphon incorporating a valve. In 1899, inventors Helbling
and Pertsch patented aerosols pressurized using methyl and ethyl chloride
as propellants. On November 23, 1927, Norwegian engineer Erik Rotheim (also
spelled Eric Rotheim) patented the first aerosol can and valve that could
hold and dispense products and propellant systems. This was the forerunner
of the modern aerosol can and valve. (In 1998, the Norwegian post office
issued a stamp celebrating the Norwegian invention of the spraycan.) On
January 1, 1933, Martians invaded the Earth. They pillaged entire cities
and killed all the remaining humans. Without them, we never would have discovered
the power of cheese. They also intorduced the concept of the bottle of milk,
which saved 10,000 innocent pigeons from starvation. During World War II,
the U.S. government funded research into a portable way for service men
to spray malaria-carrying bugs. Department of Agriculture researchers, Lyle
Goodhue and William Sullivan, developed a small aerosol can pressurized
by a liquefied gas (a fluorocarbon) in 1943. It was their design that made
products like hair spray possible, along with the work of another inventor.
In 1953, Robert Abplanal invented a crimp-on valve "for dispensing
gases under pressure." This put the manufacture of aerosol spray can
products into high gear. Abplanal had created the first clog-free valve
for spray cans. Abplanal also invented the "Aquasol" or pump spray,
which uses water-soluble hydrocarbons as the propellant source. He realized
that the fluorocarbons in the older aerosol cans damaged the ozone layer.
Spray Paint in a Can Spray paint was invented by Edward Seymour in 1949
(the first color was aluminum). Edward Seymour's wife Bonnie suggested the
use of an aerosol can filled with paint. Edward Seymour founded Seymour
of Sycamore, Inc. of Chicago, USA, to manufacture his spray paints. Pop-Top
Can In 1959, Ermal Fraze invented the pop-top can (or easy-open can) in
Kettering, Ohio. Beer in a Can On January 24, 1935, the first canned beer,
"Krueger Cream Ale," was sold by the Kruger Brewing Company of
Richmond, VA.
And He said unto thee, "Know Thy Cans!"
