Inventor John Howard Kyan ALS

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Two page autographed letter dated 1838 and signed by John Howard Kyan. Paper and signature are in good condition. John Howard Kyan ( 1774 -1850 ) was the inventor of the 'kyanising' process for preserving wood . He was the son of John Howard Kyan of Mount Howard and Ballymurtagh, County Wicklow , and was born in Dublin on Nov 27, 1774. His father was the owner of valuable copper mines in Wicklow (now worked by the Wicklow Copper Mines Company) and, for some time, worked them himself. The son was educated to take part in the management of the mines, but soon after he entered the concern its fortunes declined, and in 1804 his father died almost penniless. History of kyanising Development For a time Kyan was employed at some vinegar works at Newcastle upon Tyne , but subsequently removed to London , to Greaves's vinegar brewery in Old Street Road. The decay of the timber supports in his father's copper mines had already directed his attention to the question of preserving wood, and as early as 1812 he began experiments with a view to discovering a method of preventing the decay. Eventually he found that bichloride of mercury or corrosive sublimate, as it was commonly called, gave the best results and, without revealing the nature of the process, he submitted a block of oak impregnated with that substance to the Admiralty in 1828. It read more