"P.S.—Boiler, 3 feet diameter, 3 feet long; fire-tube, 12 inches diameter, placed in the boiler, the same as my old boilers, made of iron plates 1/8th of an inch thick, weighing about 2 cwt.
"I had a summons to attend at Guildhall last Saturday on the coal trade, and was requested to attend a committee at Westminster for the same purpose, in consequence of my applying small engines to discharge ships.
"I attended, but with difficulty, from my ill-health."
Trevithick was not above scheming for his friend's hot-house, warming it by a boiler on wheels, in form like his high-pressure steam-boiler. Rooms had before been heated by steam or hot air in pipes; but he thought a more simple and economical plan was to heat a certain quantity of water to boiling heat at any convenient place having a chimney, or in the open air, and then wheel the apparatus into the room to be warmed. If the room had a chimney, the fire could be kept up, or the temporary iron connecting chimney be removed and the apparatus wheeled into the middle of the room and used as a table.
The scheme promised to be successful, for in a letter nine months after the former he wrote that he had taken a patent for France, where it had made a great bustle among the scientific class, for coal in Paris was 3s. a hundredweight; some hot-water room-heaters were the following day to be forwarded from London to Paris; while the numerous orders were more than he could execute. One in use at the 'George and Vulture' Tavern, of a Gothic shape, handsomely ornamented with brass, about two-thirds the size of the one in Mr. Gilbert's hot-house, burns 7 lbs. of coal a day, keeping the room at 65 degrees of heat during fifteen hours. The rage amongst the ladies was to have them handsomely ornamented.
Believing that they would be remunerative, he applied for the following English patent in February, 1831.
PLATE 16.
HEATING APPARATUS.
London: E & F.N. Spon, 48. Charing Gross. Kell Bros. Lith. London.
Apparatus for Heating Apartments. 21st February, 1831.