Alan MacMasters

Alan MacMasters
A portrait of MacMasters around the time of his toaster creation.
Born Alan Alexander MacMasters
(1865-03-20)20 March 1865
Edinburgh
Died Template:25 December 1927
France
Nationality Scottish
Education University of Edinburgh
Occupation Scientist, inventor, industrialist,
Spouse(s) None
Partner(s) None
Children None
Relatives None
Notes
None

Alan MacMasters (20 March 1865 25 December 1927) was a Scottish scientist. He is credited with creating the first electric bread toaster, which then went on to be developed by Crompton, Stephen J. Cook & Company as the Eclipse.[1][2] Although not ultimately a commercial success, MacMasters's invention would pave the way for Charles Strite to invent the automatic pop-up toaster in 1919, which is the device we know as the toaster today.[3] MacMasters died of heart failure on 25 December 1927 at the age of 62.

References

  1. Myall, Steve. "Made in the UK: The life-changing everyday innovations which put British genius on the map". Daily Mirror. Trinity Mirror plc. Retrieved 2013-02-16.
  2. Momo, Larry. "Politicians and toasters are a lot alike". Washington Times. Sun Myung Moon et al. Archived from the original on 17 September 2012. Retrieved 2012-09-17.
  3. Dowling, Stephen. "Shrinking the toaster for today's tiny kitchens". BBC Future. BBC Worldwide. Retrieved 2013-05-01.
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