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Edwin Beard Budding

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Name
  
Edwin Budding

Role
  
Inventor

Edwin Beard Budding The Great and The Good Edwin Budding 17951846
Died
  
September 25, 1846, Stroud, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Elizabeth Chew (m. 1821–1846)

Parents
  
Charles Brain Budding, Mary Beard Budding

Siblings
  
William Beard Budding, Thomas Budding

Edwin Beard Budding.


Edwin Beard Budding (1796–1846), an engineer from Stroud, England, was the English inventor of the lawnmower (1830) and adjustable spanner (1842).

Contents

Edwin Beard Budding Heretic Rebel a Thing to Flout Something Mechanical to

Lawnmower's History | Greenleaf Lawn Facts | Tulsa


Lawnmower

Edwin Beard Budding Edwin Beard Budding Democratizing the Lawn personalpedia

Budding had the idea of the lawnmower after seeing a machine in a local cloth mill which used a cutting cylinder (or bladed reel) mounted on a bench to trim the irregular nap from the surface of woollen cloth and give a smooth finish. Budding's mower was designed primarily to cut the lawn on sports grounds and extensive gardens, as a superior alternative to the scythe, and was granted a British patent on 31 August 1830. It took ten more years and further innovations to create a machine that could be worked by animals, and sixty years before a steam-powered lawn mower was built. The first machine produced was 19 inches in width with a frame made of wrought iron. 

The mower was pushed from behind with the motive power coming from the rear land roller which drove gears to transfer the drive to the knives on the cutting cylinder; the ratio was 16:1. There was another roller placed in between the cutting cylinder and the land roller which was adjustable to alter the height of cut. On cutting, the grass clippings were hurled forward into a tray like box. It was soon realized, however, that an extra handle was needed in front of the machine which could be used to help pull it along. 

Two of the earliest Budding machines sold went to Regent's Park Zoological Gardens in London and the Oxford Colleges. In an agreement between John Ferrabee and Edwin Budding, dated 18 May 1830, Ferrabee paid the costs of development, obtained letters of patent and acquired rights to manufacture, sell and license other manufacturers in the production of lawn mowers. Budding realised that a similar device could be used to cut grass if the mechanism was mounted in a wheeled frame to make the blades rotate close to the lawn's surface. Budding went into partnership with a local engineer, John Ferrabee, and together they made mowers in a factory at Thrupp near Stroud.

Examples of the early Budding type mowers can be seen in Stroud Museum, the London Science Museum and at Milton Keynes Museum.

Adjustable spanner

Budding is also credited with the invention of the screw adjustable spanner.

Edwin Beard Budding BBC A History of the World Object Lawnmower Stroud
Edwin Beard Budding httpslana2594fileswordpresscom201502edwin

References

Edwin Beard Budding Wikipedia