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Wells Miners Lamp No 29 LSide | WELLS MINER'S LAMP NO. 29 - Cast iron oil lamp, 5 1/4 in. long, 5 1/4 in. high to top of shield, 3 3/4 in. base dia., marked WELLS’ NO. 29 UNBREAKABLE MINER’S LAMP on one side and A.C. WELLS & CO. STRENGTH & DURABILITY on other, complete with wick pick, chain and hook, made by A. C. Wells & Co. of Manchester, England, ex-Steve Lindberg collection (Arthur Collings Wells (A. C. Wells) founded the company in 1879 in Manchester, England. The company consisted of the Wells Mechanics Shop and the Wells Unbreakable Pulley Works. During the period of 1883 to 1900, the company applied for numerous patents dealing with industrial and domestic lighting systems and used these patents to produce a wide variety of oil lamps. It is thought the cast iron lamps were manufactured for Wells by the firm Ironfounders Henry Wallwork & Co. also in Manchester while Wells' Co. handled the sales and marketing of the lamps out of offices in both Manchester and London. A characteristic of all Wells' lamps is that the name in bold lettering is cast into the body of the lamp. Notable lamp models from Wells & Co. include the Wells' Engineers Lamp No. 4; Wells' Single Torch Lamps Nos. 5, 5A (as shown elsewhere in my pics), 15 and 15A; Wells' Double Torch Lamp No. 6; South American Silver Mining Lamp No. 10; Hanging Lamp No. 16; Moulder's Lamp No. 20; Miner's Lamp No. 29 as shown here, a design very similar to German frog lamps; and Miner's Lamp No. 32, a tunnel-style lamp. A copy of the 1915 Wells Light Catalog including many of these lamps is provided in the catalog section of my website. The Wells Co. went out of business in the late 1930s. See Stutzer and Appleton, Eureka #14, pp 24-30) | Original Image |
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