- Benjamin T. Babbitt
Benjamin Talbot Babbitt (1809-1889) was a self made American
businessman and inventor who made his fortune in the soap industry manufacturing "Babbitt's Best Soap".Early life
Benjamin Babbitt was born in city-state|Westmoreland|New York on May 1, 1809. His parents were Betsey Holman, his mother, and Nathaniel Babbitt, a blacksmith, tavern owner and ensign in the militia of Oneida County, New York, his father. cite web
url=http://home.comcast.net/~richardson156/babbittjl.html |title=Our County and Its People, Part II: Biography. Boston: The Boston History Company, 1896. |work=Oneida County, New York Biographies |accessmonthday= September 9|accessyear=2008] He attended public school and worked on the family farm. He "possessed a most ingenious and inquiring disposition", cite web |url=http://www.babbitts.info/rpbgenealogy/benjamin_talbot_babbitt.htm |title=Babbitt family genealogy |work=Benjamin Talbot Babbitt|accessmonthday=September 7 |accessyear=2008] by the time he was twenty he had learned the trades ofwheelwright ,machinist and file maker. He also took an interest in and studied chemistry from a professor who visited his work shop occasionally to give instruction to the workmen.By age twenty two Babbitt had enough money to open his first machine shop in city-state|Little Falls|New York, where for twelve years, he manufactured pumps and engines. During this time he invented a practicable and economical mowing machine, one of the first made in America. His business was destroyed by a flood in 1834, but he persevered.
Manufacturing
Babbitt moved to
New York City where he began to manufacture "saleratus" (orsodium bicarbonate , commonly called baking soda). cite web
url=http://foundationcenter.org/grantmaker/hydeandwatson/origins.html |title=The Hyde and Watson Foundation |work=Origins |accessmonthday=September 8 |accessyear=2008] He used a process which he invented, and sold the product in small, convenient and well marked packages. He packaged and marketed his product so well that he quickly controlled most of the sodium bicarbonate market. He started producing ayeast baking powder , a soap powder and several varieties ofsoap , all of them also successfully marketed well, and very popular.Babbitt invented most of the the machinery he used in his production plants. He owned extensive iron works and machine shops in city-state|Whitesboro|New York. He held 100 plus patents, beside inventions concerning his own field of business, his invention ideas ranged from wind motors, to
gun barrel s, armor plate,ventilator s, steam engine appliances,canal boat s and artificialicemaker s. cite web |url=http://www.google.com/patents?q=Benjamin+Babbitt |title=Google Patents |work=Benjamin T. Babbitt |accessmonthday=september 9 |accessyear=2008]Babbitt is credited with having first conceived the idea of using the power of
Niagara Falls . cite web |url= http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6933515|title=Find a Grave |work=Benjamin T. Babbitt|accessmonthday= Setember 7|accessyear=2008]Advertising
Babbitt became known as a genius in the art of
advertising . He rivaled his friendP. T. Barnum in originality and success, becoming a household name throughout the U.S. cite book |title=Biographical Dictionary of American Business Leaders |last=Ingham |first=John N |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1983 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=qzxy3pejsdoC |location= |isbn= 0313213623 |pages=p. 36 ]His soap was one of the first nationally advertised products. The soap was sold from brightly painted street cars with musicians, which helped lead the phrase "get on the bandwagon." Babbitt was the first manufacturer to offer tours of his factories and the first to give away
free sample s. He used the advertising slogans, "Soap for all nations" and "Cleanliness is the scale of civilization". cite book |title=Advertising Progress |last=Laird |first=Pamela Walker |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2001 |publisher= JHU Press|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=CfNJDgvXLHcC |location= |isbn=0801866456 |pages= p.97]Death and legacy
Babbitt died October 20, 1889, and was buried at
Woodlawn Cemetery , city-state|Bronx|New York. He was survived by his wife, Rebecca McDuffie Babbitt (?- 1894) and his two daughters, Ida Babbitt Hyde and Lillian Babbitt Hyde (1856-1939), to whom he left one half of his $5,000,000 estate as well as the controlling interest in his company. She established The Lillia Babbitt Hyde Foundation in 1924, and served as its president until her death in 1939. The bulk of her estate was left to the Foundation, raising the value of its assets as of June 1941, to approximately $3,200,000.Sinclair Lewis used the Babbitt family name for the title character of his bestseller, "Babbitt", about a vulgar and ignorant businessman, written in 1922.References
External links
* [http://www.google.com/patents?q=Benjamin+Babbitt&rview=1 list of patents] at
Google Patents
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