
William Sellers
Born September 19, 1824 – January 24, 1905
Improvement in Boring-Mills
Patent #: 17,641
Inducted 2007
William Sellers built machines that contributed towards the American
Industrial Revolution.
Invention Impact
Sellers invented new machine tools, such as the spiral-geared planer, a
bolt-making machine, and various gear-cutting machines. He also made older
designs with greater precision, allowing the machine tools in turn to create
more precise and standardized products. He streamlined his designs for
machine tools, eliminating the ornamentation that had distinguished
antebellum designs, and reinforced them, making them capable of performing
heavier work.
Sellers also played key roles on the boards of organizations such as the
Franklin Institute, the University of Pennsylvania, the National Academy of
Sciences, and engineering societies in America and Europe. He was well known
for his 1864 address to the Franklin Institute proposing an American
standard screw thread. Sellers' design eventually became the American
standard and was a significant contributing factor to the development of
interchangeable parts.
Inventor Bio
Born in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, Sellers received a private-school
education before apprenticing to become a machinist. After his
apprenticeship, Sellers headed a machine shop in Rhode Island, which he
left after three years to establish a shop in Philadelphia making
machine tools and heavy equipment.
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