Inventions In Miniature

By on November 7, 2012 in History / Inventions


Wired:

From 1790 until 1870, U.S. patent law required inventors to submit actual physical models of their novel machines along with their drawings and descriptions.

These miniature testaments to innovation — “not more than twelve inches square … neatly made” — are the subject of a new exhibition at Harvard University, Patent Republic.

The display draws on the collection of Susan Glendening, a New York psychoanalyst by day and fervent collector by night. Seventy-five of her models are on display in Cambridge.

Below are four models. Take the test. Can you tell what they do?

Invention A:

Invention B:

Invention C:

Invention D:

Answers:

A = “Apparatus For Physical Culture” was a predecessor to the Bowflex and pulley-driven weight lifting machines.

B = The fringemaker pictured is rare among patent models in that it actually works. (The plastic spools are not from the original.)

C = You couldn’t always change the incline of your bed with a remote control. This pillow support was adjusted by a simple thumb screw.

D = This machine for cutting lozenges is hand painted. According to the patent, the machine will allow for the manufacture of “the flat pieces of confectionery known in the trade as ‘lozenges,” with “exactness and rapidity.”

Photos by Susan M. E. Glendening.

creativity


Rich Whittle has added 6,226 posts to Business Opportunities Weblog.

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  • http://www.stratgrow.com Strategic Growth Advisors

    This is only a preview of man’s never-ending search for quality. Posts like this always make me feel happy. Thanks, Rich! Keep those posts coming!

  • http://pPatentmodelmuseum.org Susan Glendening

    I am happy there has been such positive response to my collection of models.

    77 of them are on Exhibition at Harvard University Science Center one Oxford st Cambridge MA week days from 9am to 5 pm It is free and open to the public. Thru Dec 10th There are parking meters outside the center so take your quarters

    please visit Patentmodelmuseum.org to learn more