The term camphine (or camphene) was often used interchangeably—and incorrectly—with a lamp fuel called burning fluid. Camphine, made of spirits of turpentine, had a high carbon content and tended to smoke unless burned in a lamp with a chimney. was given credit in a 1858
Scientific American article for inventing burning fluid in 1830. In 1835, Henry Porter of
Bangor, Maine, patented a mixture of camphene and alcohol that he called “Porter’s Patent Portable Composition Burning Fluid." The two lamp fuels required different lamps. Burning fluid could be used in a simple small table and hand lamps, requiring no chimney. Burning fluid lamps had two long tapering wick tubes that looked like the letter V. The tubes had caps resembling thimbles to extinguish the light and prevent evaporation when the lamp was not in use. Camphine lamps had a single fixed wick with a flame spreader and a central draft system. An 1853 article in
Scientific American tried to dispel the confusion between the two fuels. "Camphene is highly rectified spirits of turpentine, contains no alcohol, and is not explosive. It will not burn in a common lamp without a chimney . . . [burning fluid] is a mixture of rectified turpentine, with about five or six times its quantity, by measure, of alcohol. . . . It is the volatile nature of the alcohol which is the cause of danger." Because of its volatility, burning fluid was implicated in a spate of deaths and injuries from explosions and flash fires. In 1851, the
Brooklyn Daily Eagle listed almost 60 accidents in the previous year involving camphene and burning fluid and a similar list appeared in the
New York Times in 1852. In Jonesboro, Illinois, a newspaper reported 424 deaths and 623 injuries in Illinois between 1850 and 1860 due to burning fluid accidents. The
Wilmington [NC]
Daily Herald reported on a fatal accident in 1859, and added, "Will no experience, however painful, have the effect of banishing this dangerous fluid from common use?" New "safety" lamp designs, such as Newell's Patent
Safety Lamp, promised to prevent accidents, but when accidents and deaths continued, newspapers printed instructions on the safe use of oil lamps. A Nashville, Tennessee, newspaper warned In 1868, "The carrying of lamps about the house, thereby subjecting them to agitation and changes of temperature, should be strictly forbidden." John Lee Comstock, in the 1853 edition of his book
Elements of Chemistry, listed eight steps to reduce the risk of explosion with burning oil lamps, starting with "Fill the lamps in the morning." Sales of both camphine/camphene and burning fluid declined in the late 1800s as other sources of domestic illumination, including
kerosene made from petroleum,
gas lighting and
electric lighting, began to predominate. ==References==