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was accused of traitorous activity, locked up in the Tower of London and deprived of his patents. He handed the glassworks over to John Dawson, who had started there as an apprentice and worked his way up to become the manager. Dawson went into partnership with glassmaker John Bowles to operate the
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to help establish the process. Although unable to acquire the same monopoly rights as
Mansell, whose had lapsed during the Protectorate, he nevertheless, by using his influence at court to secure a ban on the importation of much specialised glass, achieved a near total control over the supply of
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The process involved blowing a glass cylinder, slitting it lengthwise, and allowing it to open to a flat sheet in an oven. It was then ground and polished to achieve a thin sheet with a flat surface. In later years the blowing process was superseded by the
74:. Most of his glass plate, up to 1 metre in size, was used for the manufacture of mirrors and coach windows and was eventually of better quality that could be imported. Around 1680 they were joined by
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business and the new company, known as Dawson, Bowles & Company, was owned and run by the two families until it closed in the late 1780s.
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acquired the works and established a factory there with the help of John
Bellingham to make blown plate-glass, recruiting a team of
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54:, who in 1615 obtained a monopoly on the manufacture of glass in England.
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35:. The site is now commemorated in the name of Glasshouse Walk.
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started a glass works there which was later taken over by Sir
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factory off what is now the Albert
Embankment in the
57:Soon after the 1660 Restoration of the Monarchy
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82:, who worked there until his death in 1683.
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59:George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham
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111:"Vauxhall, the Oval and Kennington"
38:The Vauxhall site had a history of
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217:Glassmaking companies of England
78:, inventor of the more durable
31:, London, just to the north of
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135:"Nazeing Glass Works-History"
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159:. Encyclopædia Britannica
42:dating back to 1612 when
66:plate glass in England.
137:. Nazeing Glass Works
193:51.48933°N 0.12217°W
157:"George Ravenscroft"
63:Venetian glassmakers
189: /
17:Vauxhall glassworks
198:51.48933; -0.12217
80:lead crystal glass
76:George Ravenscroft
52:Lord High Admiral
44:Sir Edward Zouche
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161:. Retrieved
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139:. Retrieved
114:. Retrieved
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40:glassmaking
21:plate glass
181:51°29.36′N
94:References
87:Buckingham
184:0°07.33′W
163:10 August
141:10 August
116:10 August
211:Category
85:In 1678
27:area of
25:Vauxhall
29:Lambeth
50:, the
19:was a
165:2015
143:2015
118:2015
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126:^
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