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Elias Howe
Born Jul 9 1819 - Died Oct 3 1867
Sewing Machine
Sewing Machine
Patent Number(s) 4,750
Inducted 2004
Elias Howe invented the first practical sewing machine. Born in Spencer,
Massachusetts, he spent his childhood and early adult years in Massachusetts.
He became a skilled machinist, apprenticing in a textile factory and
then for a master mechanic. By April 1845, Howe had created a practical
sewing machine. In a public demonstration, Howe's invention proved to
be five times faster than the swiftest hand sewers.
Invention Impact
Home was unsuccessful marketing his invention in the United States.
In 1846, he went to England and he sold the British rights for the machine
to William Thomas, a large manufacturer of corsets, shoes, and umbrellas.
Upon his return to the U.S., Howe found that some manufacturers, including
Isaac Singer, had already begun to make and sell sewing machines similar
to his. A five year legal battle ensued, lasting from 1849 to 1854.
Finally his patent was declared basic and he was awarded a royalty on
every machine that infringed his patent.
Inventor Bio
In 1865, he established the Howe Machine Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut,
and the machine that he produced there won the gold medal at the Paris
Exhibition of 1867.
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