Farmer-Batchelder Patent
by David Delling
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", May 1969, page 25
LETTERS
I noticed Rod Wing's letter in the April (1969) issue regarding the 1851
Goodyear patent ramshorn. I believe this insulator dates from several
years later.
I have a copy of U. S. Patent #21,492 issued on September 14, 1858 to
Moses G. Farmer and John M. Batchelder. This patent refers to a
rubber covered hook ramshorn which was mounted in a wood block. In
the text of the patent is the following statement:
"About three inches in length of the upper part of the hook is covered
with hard india-rubber, commonly known as "vulcanite" or "hard
compound," being the invention of Nelson Goodyear, Letters Patent
having been issued to him for the same 6th day of May, A.D. 1851."
The patent goes on to describe the process for bonding the rubber to
the hook and mounting the whole affair in a wood block. The single
claim of the patent states:
"What we claim is--
The iron wire-supporter or hook, in combination with a screw-insulator
mode of hard india-rubber and attached to the hook or shank in the
manner herein described."
I believe then that the 1851 date refers only to the rubber material - the
insulator using it dates circa 1858. Similar ones were still being sold by
Tillotson in the 1880's.
In a less elaborate form, iron hooks were used somewhat earlier probably in 1848
or 1849. Amos Kendall is the inventor of the iron hook in its earliest form.
|