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Today in History- October 21, 1824 – Portland cement is patented by Joseph Aspdin, a stone mason in Yorkshire, England (UK patent No. 5022). He made it by burning finely pulverized lime and clay at high temperatures in kilns and grinding the mixture into a powder. This hydraulic cement would then harden with the addition of water. The result was a manufactured counterpart to ancient (27 BC) Roman cement made from lime and volcanic ash. He named his invention “Portland cement” as it resembled the high quality buildingĀ stone quarried on the Isle of Portland off the British coast.
See the Engineering Pathway’s educational resources on Portland cement and concrete or visit the Civil Engineering Education, Construction Engineering Education or the Architectural Engineering Education community sites.



1 response so far ↓
1 ready mix concrete sheffield // Jan 15, 2009 at 7:20 am
Ahh I was just reading an article about the quarrying for stones on the british coast of portland. I was wondering if this is where the name of ‘portland cement’ came from.
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