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David Melville (March 21, 1773 - September 3, 1856) was an American inventor, credited with the first gas street lighting in America, and the first American patent for gas lighting. Melville was born in
Newport, Rhode Island Newport is an American seaside city on Aquidneck Island in Newport County, Rhode Island. It is located in Narragansett Bay, approximately southeast of Providence, Rhode Island, Providence, south of Fall River, Massachusetts, south of Boston, ...
to David and Mary (West) Melville. He was apparently able to light both his house and his street with gas by 1805-1806, using hydrogenous gas made by burning coal and wood. In 1876 the American Gas Light Journal stated that "in 1806 he had so far succeeded that he was enabled to light more than twenty rooms on his premises; by means of a large lantern he lighted Pelham street as it had never been lighted before." In 1916, Walton Clark stated: :The first recorded instance of the use of gas for domestic illumination in the United States fixes the date at 1806. In that year David Melville of Newport, R.I., lighted his house and the street in front it with gas manufactured upon his premises. This was one year before the first public gas lighting venture in England.... He maintained the lights in his home until 1817. His feat was considerably ahead of the commercial gas industry, as gas lighting began regular service in Newport in 1853, nearly fifty years after Melville's demonstrations. Melville was granted the first American gas light patent on March 24, 1810, and a subsequent patent on March 18, 1813, but neither is still extant as the U.S. Patent Office and all its records and models were destroyed by fire on December 15, 1836. (Like all U.S. patents before 1836, they were unnumbered.) A drawing and detailed description of Melville's Improved Gas Apparatus, presumably reflecting the 1813 patent, may be seen in an 1814 letter from
Benjamin Silliman Benjamin Silliman (August 8, 1779 – November 24, 1864) was an early American chemist and science educator. He was one of the first American professors of science, at Yale College, the first person to use the process of fractional distillat ...
, Professor of Chemistry at Yale College, to David Melville, Patentee of the Improved Gas Apparatus, as recorded in ''The Journal of Foreign Medical Science and Literature''. Likewise, both the diagram and text of the second patent are included in Thomas Cooper's book, published in 1816. This apparatus produced gas from coal. Its description states that about 40 pounds of coal would produce enough gas for 3 hours of lighting at a brightness equivalent to 50 candles. Melville married Patience S. Sherman (1791-1880) on March 4, 1812, and had six children. Late in that year, he hired the brass founders Otis Chaffee and Joseph Lyon to make gas machinery and ornamental fixtures. After partnering with Captain
Winslow Lewis Winslow Lewis ( Nathaniel Winslow Lewis; 11 May 1770 – 20 May 1850) was a sea captain, engineer, inventor and contractor active in the construction of many American lighthouses during the first half of the nineteenth century. Life and caree ...
, de facto "Superintendent for lighting the United States light houses," they began manufacturing gas equipment in Boston. By June 5, 1813, an advertisement indicated that gas lights had been installed at a cotton factory in
Watertown, Massachusetts Watertown is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, and is part of Greater Boston. The population was 35,329 in the 2020 census. Its neighborhoods include Bemis, Coolidge Square, East Watertown, Watertown Square, and the West End. Watertown ...
, apparently with Melville's equipment. On November 13, 1813, a second installation was completed in the Wenscott Manufacturing Co.'s factory near
Providence, Rhode Island Providence is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Rhode Island. One of the oldest cities in New England, it was founded in 1636 by Roger Williams, a Reformed Baptist theologian and religious exile from the Massachusetts Bay ...
. A later installation, at the Arkwright Mill near Providence exploded, destroying a small out-building and killing the watchman. In 1817, Melville received a one year contract from the U.S. Government for a trial of gas in the
Beavertail Lighthouse Beavertail Lighthouse was built in 1856 and is the premier lighthouse in Rhode Island, marking the entrance to Narragansett Bay. The lighthouse lies on the southernmost point of Conanicut Island in the town of Jamestown, Rhode Island in Beaverta ...
near Newport, but lobbying from whale oil suppliers killed the contract after one year. From 1824-1835, he served as weigher and gauger in the custom-house at Newport, but was removed from that office for political reasons by the new Collector of Customs, William Littlefield. Ultimately, Melville's work was not a commercial success.


References


Patents for David Melville
Directory of American Tool and Machinery Patents * "Copy of a Letter from Benjamin Silliman Professor of Chemistry at Yale College to David Melville Patentee of the Improved Gas Apparatus", in ''The Journal of Foreign Medical Science and Literature', Volume 5, by Samuel Emlen, 1815, pages 123-129. * "Melville's patent improved Gas Apparatus", in ''Some Information Concerning Gas Lights'', by Thomas Cooper, John Conrad & Company, Philadelphia, J. Maxwell, printer, 1816, pages 159-163. * In Senate of the United States, July 4, 1836 : read, and ordered to be printed : Mr. Goldsborough made the following report: the Committee on Commerce, to whom was referred the memorial of David Melvill, of Newport, Rhode Island, report. * "Melville's Gas Apparatus", in the ''American Gas Light Journal'', New York, A. M. Callender & Co. March 2, 1876. p. 92. * "Progress of Gas Lighting Appliances During Past Century", Extract from an Address Delivered by Walton Clark Second Vice President of the UGI Co Philadelphia Pa During the Gas Centenary Celebration at Baltimore, in ''Gas Age'', Volume 38, Harbrace Publications, 1916, page 122. * ''David Melville and his early experiments with gas in Newport'', by Edith May Tilley, Bulletin of the Newport Historical Society, 1927.
Guide to the David Melville letter
Redwood Library and Athenaeum, Newport, Rhode Island.

''The Rushlight'', Daniel W. Mattausch, December 1998.
Gas Lighting in Newport
Newport Historical Society 19th-century American inventors 1773 births 1856 deaths People from Newport, Rhode Island {{Authority control