Menu
Home Explore People Places Arts History Plants & Animals Science Life & Culture Technology
On this page
Gasogene
A household device for making carbonated water, from the 1900s

The gasogene (or gazogene or seltzogene) is a late Victorian device for producing carbonated water. It consists of two linked glass globes: the lower contained water or other drink to be made sparkling, the upper a mixture of tartaric acid and sodium bicarbonate that reacts to produce carbon dioxide. The produced gas pushes the liquid in the lower container up a tube and out of the device. The globes are surrounded by a wicker or wire protective mesh, as they have a tendency to explode.

The earliest occurrence of the word noted in the Oxford English Dictionary dates from 1853, quoting a reference in Practical Mechanic's Journal on "Gaillard and Dubois' 'Gazogene' or Aerated Water apparatus".

Related Image Collections Add Image
We don't have any YouTube videos related to Gasogene yet.
We don't have any PDF documents related to Gasogene yet.
We don't have any Books related to Gasogene yet.
We don't have any archived web articles related to Gasogene yet.

A gasogene is mentioned as a residential fixture at 221B Baker Street in Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes story "A Scandal in Bohemia": "With hardly a word spoken, but with a kindly eye, he waved me to an armchair, threw across his case of cigars, and indicated a spirit case and a gasogene in the corner."3 One is also mentioned in "The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone". The device plays a key role in Bernard Shaw's 1905 comic play Passion, Poison, and Petrifaction, Or The Fatal Gazogene.4

The word is also used in Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child's novel Brimstone, published in 2005, on page 106,5 and in their 2010 novel Fever Dream on page 362,6 and in their 2013 novel "White Fire."

A gasogene is mentioned, on page 13, as being in the forensic laboratory of Dr. Kingsley, consultant forensic examiner of Scotland Yard in Alex Grecian's 2012 novel The Yard.7

A gasogene is mentioned and its use described in Sherry Thomas's novel A Study in Scarlet Women (Book 1 of the Lady Sherlock series) on pages 244 to 246. (Ebook ISBN 9780698196353)

Amelia Peabody pulls a bottle of whiskey, a gasogene, and glasses from a hamper in order to make herself a whiskey and soda after getting her family on a train to Luxor in the novel The Golden One by Elizabeth Peters, a pen name of Barbara Mertz.

See also

Notes

  • Shaw, Bernard (1934). The Complete Plays of Bernard Shaw. London: Odhams. OCLC 2606804.

References

  1. Mixing it up: A Look at the Evolution of the Siphon-Bottle http://www.bottlebooks.com/Siphons/mixing_it_up.htm

  2. "gazogene", Oxford English Dictionary (subscription required). http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/77244

  3. Doyle, Arthur Conan, "A Scandal in Bohemia", Sherlock Holmes https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Strand_Magazine/Volume_2/A_Scandal_in_Bohemia

  4. Shaw, pp. 1113–19

  5. Preston, Douglas; Child, Lincoln (2005). Brimstone. New York: Warner Vision Books. p. 106. ISBN 9780446612753. 9780446612753

  6. Preston, Douglas; Child, Lincoln (2010). Fever Dream (1st ed.). New York: Grand Central Pub. p. 362. ISBN 978-0-446-55496-1. OCLC 455421005. 978-0-446-55496-1

  7. Grecian, Alex (2012). The Yard. St. Ives, UK: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780241958919. 9780241958919