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Candle History
Centuries old, candles have cast a light on man's progress. However, there is very little
known about the origin of candles. Although it is often written that the
first candles were developed by the Ancient Egyptians who used rush lights,
or torches, made by soaking the pithy core of reeds in molten tallow, the
rush lights had no wick like a candle. It is the Romans who are credited
with developing the wick candle, using it to aid travelers at dark, and
lighting homes and places of worship at night.
Along
with the early Egyptians, the Romans relied on tallow, gathered from cattle
or sheep suet, as the principal ingredient of candles. It was not until
the Middle Ages when beeswax, a substance secreted by honey bees to make
their honeycombs, was introduced. Beeswax candles were a marked improvement
over those made with tallow, for they did not produce a smoky flame, or
emit an acrid odor when burned. Instead, beeswax candles burned pure and
clean. However, they were expensive, and, therefore, only the wealthy could
afford them.
New
information from colonial women offered America's first contribution to
candle making when they discovered that boiling the grayish green berries
of bayberry bushes produced a sweet-smelling wax that burned clean. However,
extracting the wax from the bayberries was extremely tedious. As a result,
the popularity of bayberry candles soon diminished.
During the growth of the
whaling industry in the late eighteenth century came the first major change
in candle making since the Middle Ages, when spermaceti, a wax obtained
by crystallizing the spermaceti wax did not elicit a repugnant odor when
burned. Furthermore, spermaceti wax was found harder than both tallow and
beeswax. It did not soften or bend in the summer heat. Historians note
that the first "standard candles" were made from spermaceti wax.
Long
lasting improvements were made during the nineteenth century. This is
when most major developments affecting contemporary candle making occurred.
In 1834, inventor Joseph Morgan introduced a machine which allowed continuous
production of molded candles by the use of a cylinder which featured a
movable piston that ejected candles as they solidified.
Even
more developments in candle making occurred in 1850 with the production
of paraffin wax made from oil and coal shales. Processed by distilling
the residues left after crude petroleum was refined, the bluish-white wax
was found to burn cleanly, and with no unpleasant odor. Of greatest significance
was its cost -- paraffin wax was more economical to produce than any preceding
candle fuel developed. And while paraffin's low melting point may have
posed a threat to its popularity, the discovery of stearic acid solved
this problem. Hard and durable, stearic acid was being produced in quantity
by the end of the nineteenth century. By this period, most candles being
manufactured consisted of paraffin and stearic acid. With the introduction
of the light bulb in 1879, candle making declined until the turn of the
century when a renewed popularity for candles emerged.
Soon
came the twentieth century where candle manufacturing was further enhanced
through the growth of US oil and meatpacking industries. With the increase
of crude oil and meat production, also came an increase in the byproducts
that are the basic ingredients of contemporary candles -- paraffin and
stearic acid. No longer man's major source of light, candles continue to
grow in popularity and use. Today, candles symbolize celebration, mark
romance, define ceremony, and accent decor -- continuing to cast a warm
glow for all to enjoy!
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