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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). Search the whole document.
Found 18 total hits in 11 results.
New England (United States) (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Cambridge (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Menotomy (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
John Greenleaf Whittier (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Amos Whittemore (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profi the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
John Greenleaf (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
1759 AD (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
1828 AD (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
March 27th, 1828 AD (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
April 19th, 1759 AD (search for this): entry whittemore-amos
Whittemore, Amos 1759-1828
Inventor; born in Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1759; reared a farmer; became a gunsmith; and then, with his brother, a manufacturer of cotton and wool-cards, or card-cloth.
He claimed to have invented a machine for puncturing the leather and setting the wires, which was patented in 1797.
Before that time the work had been performed slowly by hand.
The establishment of spinning machinery in New England (see Slater, Samuel) had made the business of card-making profitable, and so useful was Whittemore's machine that the patent was sold for $150,000. His brother Samuel afterwards repurchased it and carried on the business of making card-cloth.
Amos died in West Cambridge, March 27, 1828.
Whittier, John Greenleaf