Henry Fourdrinier (1730-1799), Paper maker and father of Henry Fourdrinier
Sitter in 1 portrait
Henry Fourdrinier was a wealthy papermaker and wholesale stationer. His sons Henry and Sealy spent £60,000 on perfecting a machine for making continuous paper in 1807. Marc Isambard Brunel called the machine 'one of the most splendid inventions of the age'; it enabled printing to be done at high speed on rotary presses for the first time.
attributed to John Downman
oil on copper, circa 1786
On display in Room 19 at the National Portrait Gallery
NPG 6091
Fourdrinier
Related People
Charles Fourdrinier (son)
Henry Fourdrinier (son)
Jemima Fourdrinier (daughter)
John Rawson Fourdrinier (son)
Mary Fourdrinier (sister)
Paul Fourdrinier (father)
Sealy Fourdrinier (son)
Category
Manufacture and Industry



