George Bower (1827-1911), was the owner of the Vulcan Iron Works, St. Neots, Cambridgeshire and was a leading manufacturer of equipment for gasworks.
By 1856 Bower started to concentrate on larger schemes for providing gasworks and established the Provincial Gaslight and Coke Company.
In 1862 he patented George Bower's Bye-Pass Valves and Governor for Gas Works[2] He also worked on the development with Frederick Barth on the Bower–Barff process for the oxidisation of cast iron to form a rustless surface.
Initially Bower was very successful with the construction of larger gasworks, but he lost money on a large scheme to provide gas lighting for Rio de Janeiro and in 1889 he was declared bankrupt,[3] but he appears to have come to an agreement with his creditors and continued to operate the Vulcan Iron Works with his son Anthony Bower.
A newspaper obituary said, "He installed gas and water works in all poarts of the world, and was the inventor of many improvements in connexion with gas lighting.