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foundry and was
The drink originated in Falkirk where it was particularly popular among the town's thirsty foundry workers.
It was also applied to iron foundry work in the 1690s, but in this case the reverberatory furnace was known as an air furnace.
When she was not studying, she took independent courses from Ohio University and spent her free time casting bronzes in the school foundry.
The eldest son of Franz and Louise Dix, an iron foundry worker and a seamstress who had written poetry in her youth, he was exposed to art from an early age.
Vickers was formed in Sheffield as a steel foundry by the miller Edward Vickers and his father-in-law George Naylor in 1828.
Naylor was a partner in the foundry Naylor & Sanderson and Vickers ' brother William owned a steel rolling operation.
By 1915 twenty-five percent of the nation ’ s foundry pig iron was produced in Birmingham.
: For example: The railway coach company was offered a contract to make 15 open-topped streetcars each month, using a design that included ornate brass foundry work, but very little of the metalwork needed to produce a covered rail coach.
: The cost accountant determined that the cost of operating the foundry vs. the metalwork shop each month was as follows:
The technique was restricted to use by the royal foundry for official state publications only, where the focus was on reprinting Chinese classics lost in 1126 when Korea's libraries and palaces had perished in a conflict between dynasties.
A type foundry was added when Fell acquired a large stock of typographical punches and matrices from the Dutch Republic – the so-called " Fell Types ".
In 1798 Murdoch returned to Birmingham to work in the Soho foundry and continued his experiments with gas, as part of which he lit the interior of the Soho main building, although it is likely that it was lit only in part and not ( at this time ) permanently.
The foundry at Mission San Juan Capistrano was the first to introduce the Indians to the Iron Age.
The first time, when he was 12 years old, he and some friends broke into a foundry to steal some brass.
The top of the character would overhang the slug, forming a kern which was less fragile than the normal kerns of foundry type, as it was on a slab of cast metal.
In 2000, the company was sold to three entrepreneurs and broken into three components with the power production facilities, and foundry and forge being sold off.
Owners Fred Zollner and his sister Janet's Zollner Corporation was a foundry, manufacturing pistons, primarily for car, truck and locomotive engines.
( Although Cruden appears to have made an error in writing this, since his source, Holinshed, does not date Borthwick that early, and Caldwell agrees ) By 1511 Edinburgh was the principal foundry in Scotland, supplanting Stirling Castle, with Scottish and European smiths working under Borthwick, who by 1512 was appointed " master melter of the king's guns ".
It was originally a centre of civil servants, but the establishment of a slaughterhouse, dairy factory and iron foundry created more diverse expansion opportunities and encouraged growth.
The larger Teglholmen iron foundry was established in the 1920-1921 year to provide capacity for growth in the coming years of business acquisition.
In 1957 its foundry division was spun off as a separate A. V.

foundry and called
The main building of the hotel and the cottages " White Horses ", " Mermaid ", and " The Salutation " had been a private estate called Aber Iâ (), developed in the 1850s on the site of a late 18th Century foundry and boatyard.
In 1864 Carpenter established an iron foundry and blacksmith shop called the Illinois Iron & Bolt Company.
The Amoskeag foundry made rifles, sewing machines, textile machinery, fire engines, and locomotives in a division called the Amoskeag Locomotive Works ( later, the Manchester Locomotive Works ).
Others that followed were a knife factory, a paper mill ( at the old village, by then called Old Boonton ), a nail factory, a brass and iron foundry, and a carriage factory.
Originally part of the Land Grant to the Livingston family, this area on the Roeliff-Jansen Kill was originally called " Livingston Forge " after the iron foundry on the river.
Some of the early design could be found in the experimental font called Renner-Grotesk, which appeared as a trial type casting from the Stempel type foundry in 1936.
He works out of Blackrock with a purpose built bronze casting foundry in a house called " Clonlea ".
To meet the increased demand for rifle barrels, in 1828 the Remingtons moved their forge and foundry from its rural setting to 100 acres ( 0. 4 km² ) of land they had purchased astride the canal and abutting the Mohawk River near a town then called Morgan's Landing ( later Ilion ), New York.
Between Field Mill and Town Mill, there was an iron foundry, called Meadow Foundry, which was built by William Bradshaw and John Sansom in 1852.
It was originally called Ley's Baseball Ground and was part of a complex of sports grounds ( Ley's Recreation Ground ) built and owned by businessman Sir Francis Ley for workers at his foundry, Ley's Malleable Castings Vulcan Ironworks.
The process of sending this data to the foundry is called tapeout due to the fact the data used to be shipped out on a magnetic tape.
This detail from the Gate of Hell was first named " The Thinker " by foundry workers, who noted its similarity to Michelangelo's statue of Lorenzo de Medici called " Il Penseroso " ( the Thinker ).
This manufacturer is called a merchant foundry.
If the foundry does not have any semiconductor design capability, it is called a pure-play semiconductor foundry.
Fabless manufacturing is the design and sale of hardware devices and semiconductor chips while outsourcing the fabrication or " fab " of the devices to a specialized manufacturer called a semiconductor foundry.
Over those early years Purdue's football team were called ' grangers ', ' pumpkin-shuckers ', ' railsplitters ', ' cornfield sailors ', ' blacksmiths ' and ' foundry hands ', but ultimately it was ' Boilermakers ' that finally stuck.
The principal of this group was Cawthra Mulock, a 21-year-old foundry owner, scion of two of Ontario's most prominent families ( the Cawthras and the Mulocks ) who lived a short walk east of site in a large home called " Cawthra House ", locally famed for its doorknobs of solid gold.
Reverberatory furnaces ( in this context, usually called air furnaces ) were formerly also used for melting brass, bronze, and pig iron for foundry work.
In 1851 he established a small iron works in Newton, Cheshire, expanding it a year later by building a new foundry called the Newton Moor Iron Works on Muslin Street ( now Talbot Road ), between Hyde and Dukinfield.
The activity of planning of how a casting will be gated and risered is called foundry methoding or foundry engineering.
In 1865 with a partner, he bought a foundry company, which they called the Ripley Foundry and Machine Company.

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