- History of Connecticut industry
The history of Connecticut Industry is a major part of the
history of Connecticut . Between the birth of the U.S.patent system in 1790 and 1930, Connecticut had more patents issued per capita than any other state; in the 1800s, when the U.S. as a whole was issued one patent per three thousand population, Connecticut inventors were issued one patent for every 700–1000 residents. Connecticut's first recorded invention was alapidary machine, byAbel Buell of Killingworth, in 1765.Pre-industrialization
Connecticut began, as most communities at the time, as a
farm ing economy. It rapidly developed trade and manufacturing as the farmers, and then the merchants and manufacturers themselves, became affluent enough to start buying things. Manufacturing was aided by a plenitude of resources, including water power, wood for fires and building material, and iron ore, while transportation benefited from several excellent natural harbors, and navigable rivers leading all the way to Massachusetts. As in most of New England, the residents believed that industry, in all senses of the word, not only strengthened individual moral fiber, but also served to make the colony independent and free to pursue its own religious and philosophical beliefs. While manual labor was valued, learning and study was also prized and many schools were founded, withYale University the most significant. The development byEli Whitney of the system of precision manufacturing of interchangeable parts and theassembly line in the late 1700s, however made Connecticut into a major center of manufacturing. This development changed "made in the United States" from a phrase connoting shoddy workmanship and expensive maintenance, into a world standard for high quality, and the entire system became known as theAmerican system of manufacturing .In the late 1700s, the Connecticut government engaged in financial incentives for building and operating
textile mills.The Connecticut Valley (Wethersfield, East Windsor, and Colchester) was a center of
cabinetmaking andfurniture construction in the latter half of the 1700s. Beginning in the Queen Anne style, by the end of the period the furniture had evolved into four distinct variations of theChippendale style; that ofEliphalet Chapin , one of the masters of the craft, who tended to produce pieces which were more compact and chunky in appearance, incorporating some of thePhiladelphia rococo style without as much fussiness; that of the Colchester/Norwich area, exemplified bySamuel Loomis , as well as those of the Wethersfield and Springfield–Northampton areas.19th Century
Between 1800 and 1860, Connecticut manufacturers applied the system to the manufacture of economically priced high quality firearms, leading to Connecticut's nickname "the
arsenal ofdemocracy ."Middletown, Connecticut was the major supplier ofpistol s to the United States government during theWar of 1812 , with numerous gun manufacturers in the area. In 1810,Oliver Bidwell built the firstpistol factory in the United States on thePameacha River in Middletown, winning a contract with theUnited States War Department for handmade pistols. Also in 1810, ColonelSimeon North built a pistol factory in Middletown on the West River, now theCoginchaug River , also winning a contract from theUnited States Secretary of War , which led to enlarging his factory to 8,500 square feet (790 m²); he built about 10,000 pistols a year, up until just before the Civil War, designing America's firstmilling machine . Even more successful was ColonelNathan Starr Jr. , whose factory (built of stone quarried from the river) was about the same size as North's, and located across the river half a mile northeast. Starr initially manufacturedsword s, about 5,000 a year; including presentation swords for the state ofTennessee andWar of 1812 heroes, colonelRichard M. Johnson , GeneralEdmond P. Gaines , and GeneralAndrew Jackson . The factory later manufacturedmusket s and rifles until 1845, after which the United States government started government armories inMassachusetts andWest Virginia partially modeled after Starr's. In 1812,John R. Johnson andJ. D. Johnson built a factory, also on the Pameacha River, which was to sell rifles to the government until 1825. After this period, firearm manufacturing declined in Middletown, but briefly revived during the Civil War. TheSavage Revolving Fire Arm Company manufactured pistols between 1859 and 1866, and theSage Ammunition Works manufactured ammunition between 1864 and 1867.In
1836 ,Samuel Colt invented therevolver design which continues to be used to this day.Colt's Manufacturing Company hiredElisha K. Root to modernize production, making Colt weapons the first in the world with truly interchangeable parts. Horace Smith andDaniel B. Wesson designed the firstrepeating rifle in Norwich in the early 1850s, which went into production by theNew Haven Arms Company (which later became theWinchester Repeating Arms Company ), and, just across the border inMassachusetts , theSpringfield Armory . Smith also patented a metallic rifle cartridge in 1854.Christian Sharps designed the Sharpsbreech-loading rifle which in 1854 began to be manufactured in Hartford by theSharps Rifle Manufacturing Company .Christopher Spencer designed theSpencer repeating rifle which played an important role for Union troops at theBattle of Gettysburg .Another area where precision manufacture led to industrial dominance for Connecticut was in the manufacture of
clock s,watch es, and othertimepiece s, byEli Terry and his apprenticeSeth Thomas , theForestville Manufacturing Company (which became theE. N. Welch Company ), theNew England Clock Company , theAnsonia Clock Company ,Gilbert Clocks ,Ingraham Clocks , theNew Haven Clock Company ,Welch Clocks ,Sessions Clocks , and theWaterbury Clock Company , which becameTimex Corporation , and is the sole Connecticut survivor of this once flourishing field, now decimated by lower costs of production elsewhere, in the United States and overseas. TheAmerican Clock and Watch Museum is located inBristol, Connecticut .Similarly, Connecticut industry became well known in allied fields.
Hardware andtool s continue to be manufactured byStanley Corporation in New Britain, despite having almost moved elsewhere for financial reasons. Connecticut was a major area for development and manufacture ofmachine tool s. In 1818,Simeon North designed America's firstmilling machine . Machinist Elisha Root first designed machinery for theCollins Company of Collinsville which manufacturedaxe s which became world-famous, then was hired by Colt in 1849 to modernize firearm production by designing precision drop hammers,boring machine s, gauges,jig s, etc., and improving the milling machines designed byFrancis A. Pratt for theGeorge S. Lincoln company in Hartford; the resultingLincoln Miller became world-famous, selling over 150,000 machines. Another Colt engineer, William Mason, patented 125 inventions for manufacture of firearms, as well as steam pumps and power looms.Christopher Spencer invented the automatic turret lathe (which in its small- to medium-sized form is known as ascrew machine ) for machining screws, as well as the variable cam cylinder used to control the turret.Francis A. Pratt andAmos Whitney invented a thread milling machine in 1865; Whitney also perfected various measurement instruments, and Pratt designed the aforementioned original milling machine manufactured by theGeorge S. Lincoln company of Hartford.Simon Fairman invented thelathe chuck in West Stafford in 1830, and his son-in-law,Austin F. Cushman , invented the self-centeringCushman Universal Chuck in 1862.Edward P. Bullard designed thevertical boring mill in 1883.Charles E. Billings perfected thedrop hammer formetal forging in the 1870s and designed the coppercommutator central to the operation ofelectrical generator s and motors.Edwin R. Fellows of Torrington in 1896 designed and built a new type of gear shaper and founded the Fellows Gear Shaper Company, which made a vital contribution to the manufacture of effective and reliable gear transmissions for the nascentautomotive industry . The name Bridgeport on machine tools continues to be a guarantee of high quality around the world, for people who have no idea that the machinery is named after a city in Connecticut. Even the world of toys was dominated by theA. C. Gilbert Company , manufacturers ofErector Set s as well as other educational toys such aschemistry set s,microscope s,toy train s, etc.Another area of industry where Connecticut excelled was in
bicycle manufacturing, and its spin-off, the earliestautomobile manufacturing .Albert Pope of Hartford saw a bicycle inPhiladelphia in 1876 and was immediately enthralled with the concept of an "ever-saddled horse that eats nothing and requires no care." He subsequently began the first bicycle manufacturing in America,Columbia Bicycles , and set about marketing the vehicle, setting up a system of distributorships with fixed prices, hiring doctors to tout cycling as healthy exercise, and founding cycling magazines. When thesafety bicycle was developed in the 1880s, he was in a perfect position to benefit from the subsequent craze.Connecticut also became an innovative leader in the
shipbuilding industry. The first recordedsteam power ed boat in America was built by South Windsor's John Fitch in 1786. The first militarysubmarine , the Turtle, was built in Connecticut in 1775 byDavid Bushnell ; since then, Connecticut has remained a world leader in the manufacture of these specialized ships.Simon Lake produced submarines for the US Navy in Bridgeport, beginning in 1913, and the work done byJohn P. Holland led to submarine production by theElectric Boat Company in Groton beginning in 1924, which continues to this day.20th Century
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