No. 457
Slade, Caleb
Troy
November 11, 1837
Witnesses: Whiting, Daniel & Cross, Geo.
A peculiar-looking cooking stove for burning coal, with a "common sunk hearth."
No. 576
Eaton, Eben
Troy
January 20, 1838
Witnesses: Hunter, Jno. & Thomas, H.
A gothic parlor heater with a complicated firebox / grate hung on pivots inside the stove, so that the fire could be seen through the mica windows in all four sides. The stove would have had to be free-standing, in the middle of a room or at least some way out from a wall. This idea came to fruition in the 1850s with the base-burner stove, which also had windows all the way round.
No. 813
Robinson, Eli C.
Troy
June 30, 1838
Witnesses: Furnale, Emet W. & Whiting, Daniel
A four-column parlor stove of the kind the Capital District was famous for producing at the time, but which rarely crops up in patent documents because they involved no patentable "improvement." This one was different in function, not simply appearance, which is why it qualified. It had a brick-lined firebox jacketed with warm-air flues to increase the room-heating effect and stop the sides becoming overheated, and a mechanical dumping grate to enable the user to remove ashes and clinkers dustlessly, without having to open the door and poke.
No. 815
Atwood, Anson
Troy
June 30, 1838
Witnesses: Hanby, Samuel & Briggs, James
This device was meant to satisfy a demand that the increasing use of cast-iron cook stoves helped create -- for an appliance that would do the cooking in the summer, when the heat a regular stove transmitted into the kitchen was not a desirable by-product of using it and might even be unbearable. It was an iron (probably wrought, not cast) oven with two compartments, heated by a small charcoal- or anthracite-fueled furnace in front with room for one boiler on it. The flue went through the middle of the oven, "by which improvement the radiation of heat into the room is more perfectly prevented than has hitherto been effected, while it is at the same time applied in the most direct manner to the purpose of cooking." Atwood's invention was sufficiently valuable to be worth reissuing in 1847 as
Reissue No. 95, witnessed by the leading New York City stove inventor, maker, and merchant Jordan L. Mott, who may even have been a customer for the design features the patent protected.
Atwood made his first entry into the list of proprietors and managing partners in the Troy stove industry in 1841, owning and running the Empire foundry on Canal Avenue, where he remained until 1846 with a single partner, Spencer Cole, from 1844 to 1845 (Cole probably ran their wholesale and retail side), and another, Isaac Crane, in 1846. James Briggs was a pattern maker, Hanby not yet identified.
No. 820
Treadwell, John G.
Albany
June 30, 1838
Witnesses: Thompson, W. & Thorn, Linton
"The Compound Parlor Dumb Stove." Americans had used heating drums attached to stoves' flue pipes for decades -- they made it possible to warm an upper room from the waste heat of a stove downstairs. Treadwell's patent shows an example using the columnar-stove design popular at the time. Its distinctive feature was that also contained a firebox
F, so that when more heat was required the stove became live rather than dumb. See also Blanchard's 1841 patent
2355, below
No. 825
Bucklin, Isaac B.
Troy, West
July 9, 1838
Witnesses: Sheldon, C.D. & Masten, H.V.W.
This was not the only Railway Cooking Stove patented at the time, but (as with
Williams's 1836
9350X in Part 1 of this catalogue), it is difficult to see the point of adding complication to a flat-topped four-boiler cook stove by making it possible to "increas[e] or decreas[e] the size of the whole, according to the use intended to be made of it." Patentees did not always explain
why their improvement was desirable as well as how it was made and worked. My best guess, from reading other railway cooking-stove patents (e.g. Anson Atwood's, below), is that it made it easier to heat the oven, and use less fuel, when only two boiler-holes were required.
Bucklin's stove must have had some practical value: his patent was
reissued in New York in 1840 (witnesses Frederick R. Sherman & Seth P. Staples) "to prevent mistake as to the nature and extent of my claim."
No. 915
Stewart, Philo P.
New York City
September 12, 1838
Witnesses: Serrell, William & James E.
Included here because Stewart moved to Troy the following year to get his stove made and marketed, and lived there the rest of his life. The Stewart became the classic Troy cooking stove, the standard against which all others were judged. I have written
a whole blog post on Stewart and his stove -- the man and his life were even more fascinating than the things he made. Here I'll just write about this patent.
Philo Penfield Stewart "of Hudson street, ... stove maker" lived in poverty on the Lower West Side and labored for years to perfect his ideas for a cooking stove that would be better than any other in use. His stove was intended to be used for burning wood or coal or even, in summer, when less heat was required, peat.
Like other cook stove designers, e.g. Eliphalet Nott, he was intent on minimizing fuel consumption and also the wastage of heat from the stove into the kitchen -- something that, in summer, could make it intolerably hot. Stewart achieved this by the unique design of his firebox and grate and by jacketing his stove with removable reflective tinplate cladding on the sides.
(1) In winter the "jacks" were removed and "by using anthracite coal, the warmth may be maintained through the night."
(2) In summer they were put back on, ensuring less fuel consumption and more comfort. In intermediate weather, the housewife could use them or take them off easily, depending on the day.
Other features included:
(3) dustless ash-removal,
(4) a firebox and oven guaranteeing low fuel consumption and uniform baking,
(5) exceptional but simple controllability via a single air-inlet valve,
(6) removable tin covers for the stove top, to enable the broiling of food, or heating flat irons, without overheating the apartment,
(7) a reflector oven on the hot side plate, and
(8) a removable hot-water reservoir on the top.
The Stewart stove was unusually thoughtfully designed and precisely manufactured so that it could do a great deal of work with a small amount of fuel, and occupy a limited space in the kitchen. Its two pages of drawings, even without the key to all of the detail they contained, demonstrate how comparatively sophisticated it was.
RX 6
Spoor, Abraham D.
Troy
March 15, 1834 Coxsackie / Reissued December 4, 1838
Witnesses: Adancourt, F. & Adancourt, C.L.
I have squeezed this patent in because it qualifies a bit like Stewart's. Dr Abraham Spoor lived in Coxsackie, 25 miles south of Albany along the Hudson, when he patented this parlor stove in 1834, but by the time he reissued it in 1838 he had gravitated towards the Capital District for the same reason Stewart would soon follow the same path. It had become the best place on the East Coast to design, make, and market stoves, where he could sell his patent rights to local manufacturers [Bosworth & Barton advertisement, "Coal Cooking Stoves," Troy Daily Whig 22 Sept. 1835 onwards]. I have also included it because the patent record is full of cook stoves but notably short of the parlor stoves that the industry was producing at the same time.
Spoor's "celebrated parlor stove" [Bosworth & Barton ad.] was an attractive square appliance with mica windows to allow a sight of the fire, a mechanical shaking, rotating, dumping, and dustless grate to make the burning of anthracite easier and cleaner, decorated plates, and brass knobs at each corner with an elegant urn in the center of the flat top. Its unique design feature was the "reverberating" or "revolving" downdraft flues at all four corners of stove:
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments will be moderated to prevent spamming, phishing, and advertising. If you wish to do any of these things, please don't waste your time and mine.