Parade To Honor Earmuff Inventor

November 28, 2007 by Rich | 1 Comment
In Events, Invention


Morning Sentinel:

Chester Greenwood Day, Farmington Maine’s distinctive claim to fame, is not just for local earmuff aficionados.

The local display of ear coverings — from big and fluffy to comic to fashionable — can be inventive and quirky, and organizers say this year they hope to expand the Dec. 1 event.

“This is an invitation to people from other areas to come and join in the fun,” said Lorna Nichols, the executive director of the Franklin County Chamber of Commerce, which hosts the parade and several other events.

“There is a lot of interest in Chester Greenwood Day. I get calls all the time from people who want to know about Chester and whether he really invented the earmuff,” she said. “This year, I even got a call from someone in England. People think it is quirky.”

Greenwood, a prolific inventor, successful businessman and community leader, was born in Farmington in 1858. At the age of 15, he put together some bits of wire, fur and wool and asked his grandmother to sew them in place because he got tired of having cold ears in the winter.

The invention was the precursor of Greenwood’s patented “ear mufflers.”

By the 1930s, they were being sold as Champion Ear Protectors and kept several hundred local people employed at his factory on Front Street and by doing piecework at home.

Photo by USPTO.

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