George Herbert Skinner

British businessman
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish businessman
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
isEngineer
Work fieldEngineering
Gender
Male
Birth1 April 1872, Municipal Borough of Ealing
The details

Biography

George Herbert Skinner (1872–1931) was a British boot and shoe manufacturer, enthusiastic pioneer motorist and inventor of a well-known carburettor which remained in production almost the entire twentieth century until superseded by fuel injection systems.

Biography

Herbert Skinner was born in 1872 in Wellingborough the eldest son of boot and shoe manufacturer William Banks Skinner (1847-1914) and his wife born Jane Lilley. In 1881 Banks Skinner entered into a partnership with his brother-in-law, Thomas Lilley (1845-1916), and they built a very successful footwear manufacturing and retailing business, Lilley & Skinner.

The eldest son, Herbert Skinner followed his father into the management of Lilley & Skinner. He brought back Britain's first modern shoe-making machinery from an 1895 visit to USA.

He acquired his first car in 1898 and actively participated in the development of the petrol engine. Herbert with his brother Carl, Thomas Carlisle Skinner (1882-1958), made a newly developed carburetter in 1904. In February 1905 Herbert applied for a full patent which was granted in January 1906. The new carburetter was made for the Skinner brothers by G Wailes & Co of Euston Road until the brothers formed a limited liability company in August 1910 to manufacture it themselves. The original brand name Union Carburetter was changed to S. U. carburetter, an abbreviation of Skinner-Union. Younger brother, Carl (Thomas Carlisle) Skinner (1882-1958) sold out of Lilley & Skinner and took over the carburettor business. Herbert remained with Lilley and Skinner and continued to patent improvements to his carburetter.

He was one of the founders and the vice-president of the Institute of Patentees and well-known in the City of London as an active member of the Cordwainers' Company. He represented England as a clay-bird shot in the 1908 Olympic Games and won a bronze medal.

Herbert was father of Professor Herbert Skinner. He did not believe in early schooling. His son was nine years old before he entered Durston House School at Ealing.

Herbert Skinner died suddenly at his house in Woodville Road, Ealing on 29 December 1931 aged 59.

Diagram of original carburettor with leather bellows


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