Joseph Aspdin

Inventor

1778 – 1855

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Who was Joseph Aspdin?

Joseph Aspdin was an English cement manufacturer who obtained the patent for Portland cement on 21 October 1824.

Joseph Aspdin was the eldest of the six children of Thomas Aspdin, a bricklayer living in the Hunslet district of Leeds, Yorkshire. He was baptised on Christmas Day, 1778. He entered his father's trade, and married Mary Fotherby at Leeds Parish Church on 21 May 1811.

By 1817 he had set up in business on his own in central Leeds. He must have experimented with cement manufacture during the next few years, because on 21 October 1824 he was granted the British Patent BP 5022 entitled An Improvement in the Mode of Producing an Artificial Stone, in which he coined the term "Portland cement" by analogy with the Portland stone, an oolitic limestone that is quarried on the channel coast of England, on the Isle of Portland in Dorset. See below for the text of the patent.

Almost immediately after this, in 1825, in partnership with a Leeds neighbour, William Beverley, he set up a production plant for this product in Kirkgate, Wakefield. Beverley stayed in Leeds, but Aspdin and his family moved to Wakefield at this point.

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Born
Dec 1, 1778
Leeds
Children
Nationality
  • United Kingdom
Profession
Died
Mar 20, 1855
Wakefield
Resting place
St John's, Wakefield

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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