- Jesse Fell
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This article is about the discoverer of a new process for coal combustion. For the prominent Illinois businessman, see Jesse W. Fell.
Jesse Fell was an early political leader in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. He was the first to successfully burn anthracite coal on an open air grate. His method and 'discovery' in 1808 led to the widespread use of coal as the fuel source that helped to foster America's industrial revolution. He lived in the Fell House and Tavern until his death. The House stood until the 1980s when Wyoming Valley Health Care demolished it to build a parking lot. The bricks used to build the house are now in the house of Wayne Segar in Bear Creek Pennsylvania. The grate used by Fell is in the possession of the Wyoming Historical and Geological Society.
References
- Oscar Jewel Harvey, History of Wilkes-Barre and the Wyoming Valley
Categories:- American inventors
- Innovators
- People from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
- American engineer stubs
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