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Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography/Downer, Samuel

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Edition of 1900.

DOWNER, Samuel, manufacturer, b. in Dorchester, Mass., 8 March, 1807; d. there, 20 Sept., 1881. He left school at fourteen, spent six years in a shipping house in Boston, and was received into partnership by his father, a West India merchant. He afterward engaged in the manufacture of sperm oil and candles, and in 1854 directed a series of experiments in producing hydro-carbon oils by distillation from various substances. From a kind of bituminous coal known as Albertite he obtained what is now called kerosene. The demand for this oil increased rapidly, and it was obtained from the Albertite till the discovery of petroleum in Pennsylvania in 1861. Another result of these experiments, made principally by Mr. Joshua Merrill, superintendent of the Downer works, was the discovery in 1869 of “mineral sperm oil,” and these and other products of the distillation of crude petroleum are manufactured by the company under Mr. Merrill's patents.