Nicholas Power (projector manufacturer)

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Mechanism of Power's No. 6 Cameragraph, Showing the Three-Wing, Outside Shutter.

Nicholas Power (October 22, 1854–February 7, 1921) was one of the most successful manufacturers of film projectors in the silent era, creating some of the earliest commercial projectors.[1] He began his career working in theaters in the 1890s, and taking apart Edison projectors to learn how they worked. He soon launched a repair shop for Edison projectors as he developed his own.[1] His great improvement on the Edison models was inventing a projector that didn't flicker.[2] The Silent Cinema Society features a copy of his 1916 "Cameragraph" catalog, for a projector he patented in 1906, from the holdings of the Hoboken Historical Museum.[3] He died in Palm Beach, Florida, shortly after his retirement, at age 66, and The New York Times called him "an important contributor to the advancement of cinematography."[2]

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