John C. Hermance was one of the many inventors in the 1840s who attempted to perfect his own version of the large-capacity cooking stove that had been developing since at least the mid-1830s. He went head-to-head in the market and the courts with what turned out to be the dominant answer to the design questions so many makers had been addressing, Darius Buck's 1839 patent. This post will give him and his stove more space than they could have otherwise, in my blog posts on Buck and the large-oven stove and on New York Capital District stove inventors.
Who was John C. Hermance? There is not much to work with. Little biographical or genealogical information about him seems to be available online, apart from his birth (1805) and death (1858), and the fact that he was married but apparently childless, and widowed in 1849. This is strange, given his distinctive surname. Many other Hermances were also involved in the Hudson Valley's stove industry both before and after John's time. Garret Hermance or Heermance (the spelling varied) of Poughkeepsie patented a peculiar circular cook stove in 1838, and operated the Variety Stove Store in Albany by the early 1840s. A Jacob Hermance worked as a salesman for John's stoves in the mid-1840s, and a U.C. Hermance served as his local agent in Peekskill at the same time. Other Hermances continued the family connection after John's death. Robert M. Hermance, originally a Saratoga County farmer from Stillwater, but later a founder and machinist, was the most important, with four patents 1858-1872 (one of them reissued). Most of them were for the must-have stove accessory at the time, the hot-water reservoir, and three of them were taken out after he had moved to Troy, 16 miles south. Charles W. from Schuylersville, a dozen miles further upriver from Stillwater, added a couple more patents in 1869-70, one of them also for stove reservoirs, and for which Robert served as a witness. And Levi from Lansingburg (North Troy) contributed his own reservoir improvements (three patents, one reissued to strengthen its value, in 1870-1871). But what (if any) were the linkages among these three cooperating Hermances from the generation after John, or between them and John himself, or from John to Garret, Jacob, or U.C.? I do not know, yet, but it can hardly have been mere coincidence.
Biographical and genealogical data may be in short supply, but John Hermance's life has left more traces in other public records. His movements can be followed, though not very closely: in Rochester in 1838, already a stove salesman, and Schenectady by 1841-2; to Albany between the late 1840s and 1852, trading as a stove wholesaler; and finally to Malta, Saratoga County, 30 miles north (but just 9 from Stillwater), at the time of his death or at least burial. His business also crops up repeatedly in the enormous New York State historical newspapers collection, chiefly in the form of advertisements enabling us to see how and where he promoted and sold his stoves, and how he had them made. He also produced one publication, of which a single copy seems to survive -- the 1848 circular whose front cover is reproduced, not very sharply, above. But of the stoves sold to his many thousands of satisfied customers not a single remaining example has come to light.
Hermance's 1844 patent was neither extended nor reissued, and expired in 1858, the year of his death. Lack of evidence of patent management like this is usually an indication of a patent's lack of any particular significance, but in this case that would be misleading. A different sort of evidence is provided by the number of officially reported court cases in which it was involved. Most of the many patents that were litigated did not result in any such report. They may have left some trace in local newspapers, but usually the only records they leave behind are moldering quietly in the archives, if they survive at all. But Hermance's patent was involved in at least six trials before federal judges between 1845 and 1849, three of them sufficiently important for the points of law they helped establish to be reported officially. He ran up against the determined and well-resourced opposition of the owners of the Buck patent, and eventually he lost. But this did not finish his business, which carried on for at least three more years.
What I will do here is to assemble some of the principal sources from which his life and work can be reconstructed and to comment on them as I go. There is not really enough to be worth trying to cast it into a coherent analytical narrative -- there are too many gaps and silences -- but there is plenty for any interested reader to get his or her teeth into, and form some sense of how one entrepreneur navigated his way through the risks and possibilities of the emerging stove business in the 1840s.
(1) The Patent
June 13, 1844
Witnesses Thomas P. Jones & William Bishop
This was a rival of Jonathan Hathaway's, Darius Buck's, P.P. Stewart's, and other large-oven stoves. It was a full, detailed, very professional piece of work -- understandable as Hermance's agent was Thomas P. Jones himself, former editor of the Journal of the Franklin Institute and director of the U.S. Patent Office. There is even enough detail in the drawings to enable one to understand how his stove's constituent plates fitted together.
Hermance's stove had two ovens A and B, like Hathaway's, rather than a single large one like Stewart's or Buck's, and also a detachable roasting or baking reflector oven sitting on the hearth. It had four boiler holes, with the covers made as concentric cast rings so that they could easily be adapted to utensils of different diameters. The center plate between the two front boiler holes was also removable, so that with all three taken out there would be room for a griddle straight over the fire. These were not new features. Hermance, like other inventors and designers, was simply building other makers' good (unpatented) ideas into his stove to suit growing customer expectations.
CIRCULAR
[p. 3] The attention of manufacturers, dealers and purchasers of Cooking Stoves, is solicited to the examination of the following:
The production of a successful Cooking Stove has, for a number of years past, engaged the attention of manufacturers and dealers in the article, to the fullest extent, and stimulated to action the inventive powers of mechanical ingenuity, and induced numerous men of genius and scientific mechanics, to devote their time to the accomplishment of the important object.
The result has been seen and realised by the public, in the appearance of an endless catalogue of Cooking Stoves, varying as widely in form and principle, as in their adaptation to the wants of the country, and consequent want of success upon introduction; while the few improvements considered valuable, obtained in the result, have been subjects of universal imitation by others and by their sameness in construction and apparent principle and merit, productive of a fatal competition; and the success of the various Stoves (in introduction) more dependent upon the popularity and efforts of the various manufacturers and dealers, than any real advantage over others.
[p. 4] Hermance started out selling Buck, Hathaway and other large oven Cooking Stoves, "the pioneers in the change since taken place in the market in the manufacture of larger and more perfect ovens, and a more durable construction than was realized in the premium and other Cooking Stoves in general use. The advantage of large oven, then and still most effective and popular, was in the shape secured, as then supposed, by [BUCK’s] patent, and consequently, in efforts to obtain this object, other various forms were adopted, none of which were the large and convenient shape, or operated upon as sure a principle to effect the equal distribution of heat. To these attempts at imitation and evasion of patent, may be attributed the introduction of fuel saving and other important advantages not contained in the above named stoves.
The combination and perfection of the above shaped large oven, with the addition of a smaller oven, for purposes requiring different degrees of heat, with the more compact form and advantage of fuel saving and adaptation to use, with wood or coal, together with the other improvements in the more recent style of stoves, is more than realized in the combination of the whole, most simply effected, in the construction of the Cooking Stove known as the Dispatch, and now offered to the public in a new arrangement of beautiful paterns (sic), with the fullest confidence of possessing greatly superior advantages over other Cooking Stoves in the market, in their manufacture, sale, or use ... [There were] Thousands of delighted purchasers [and testimonials] ... the most liberal and exclusive privileges are offered in its manufacture, and dealers will be supplied from such arrangements, and those now made, upon the most advantageous terms...
[p. 5] DESCRIPTION -- "a simple combination of hot air chambers, arranged under and in rear of the fire-box, thereby preventing the too direct application of heat to the front of the ovens, the heat also serving in its passage to heat the tops of the oven forming the hot air flue ... most evenly and perfectly" [and indirectly the lower oven, with an] equal distribution of heat ...
In the above valuable combination and arrangement of Hot Air Chambers, is embodied the whole secret of our success and merit of the Dispatch Cooking Stove. … [patent 13 June 1844] In imitation of the above highly popular arrangement, many awkward and complicated Cooking Stoves have made their appearance for experiment, with those unfortunately in their manufacture, the public who may be induced to purchase them. Their history is well known. Manufacturers, dealers and purchasers should be on their guard, as Stoves, to perform well with one oven, require principle in their construction; and its application, if not absence in these double oven imitations will readily appear, from their host of dampers and complications in its stead. A few double oven Cooking Stoves having acquired some notoriety [p. 6] must not be taken as a sample of the Dispatch in any particular ... even if they wish but one oven, ours is more perfect... Fuel saving is proverbial with the Dispatch."
[Recent modifications: "points in summer arrangement" and larger fire box for hard coal -- the "summer arrangement" was a small firebox under the front hearth, with two boiler holes over it, so that limited cooking could be done in the summer without having to use much fuel or overheat the kitchen.]
[p. 7] "We publish the following result of the trial testing the validity of the patent claimed upon the Buck Stove, obtained in a suit instituted by Buck and Wright; and in its progress influenced directly by the combined efforts of the vast moneyed monopoly recently engaged in its manufacture and sale. Others in the trade, also alarmed at the success evidently awaiting our unprejudiced introduction of an article sure to draw upon their trade to a great extent, were more indirectly our opponents. It will be seen how far this unjust attempt availed them in the event. We annihilated the assailing patent on the one hand, and are in the field as anticipated to compete with one another, by offering to the public an article in Cooking Stoves beyond comparison with the above named Stove in capacity for business and excellence of performance or economy in fuel. The facts are all well substantiated; and we claim in the Dispatch to have attained a higher point in the scale of adaptation to the wants of the public, than any Stove in the entire catalogue now offered in the market. We would here also add, that the reports of the granting of a new trial are not only false, but must not be circulated at all, even from hearsay, to my injury. I even doubt the wish of another trial. If this course shall come in contact with the interest of those in the manufacture of the Dispatch Cooking Stove, we would advise the sale of the Buck Stove, at a reduced price, if customers upon an examination of facts would purchase it; but if such reports shall come more directly in contact with our interest, the circulators will be dealt with as our judgement and interest shall dictate. This course is not desirable.
[p. 8] from the Ontario Repository --
US Circuit Court at Canandaigua, June 1847. BUCK and WRIGHT vs. JOHN C. HERMANCE. Action to try the validity of the patent for Buck's Cooking Stove. -- This important and interesting case, which occupied the Court through four days of the last week, was brought to a close on Saturday afternoon, by a verdict
for the defendant.
... Hermance denied this [infringement], and insisted that the Buck stove had no originality about it, and that Buck was not the inventor of what he patented and claimed as his own, but that he pirated it from others -- chiefly from the Hathaway stove. This, of course, opened all questions touching the validity of the Buck patent, and it was thoroughly sifted for several days by the eminent counsel engaged.
[Two previous trials at Albany, hung juries .. District Judge gives injunction vs. Hermance after the second trial "to put a stop to his making the Dispatch stoves."]
Counsel for plaintiffs: R.L. Joice of Albany, Jared Wilson, Esq., and Governor Seward. For the Defendants -- Mark H. Sibley and Samuel Stevens, Esq.
TESTIMONIALS: "We add for perusal the following, and do not publish for want of space, hundreds in our possession."
-- from manufacturers/dealers: Schenectady ... New Brunswick ... Glensfalls (sic), pp. 8-10
[p. 10] "Have not thousands in the production of Cooking Stoves, failed in their efforts from ignorance of the wants of the public, notwithstanding the important influences used in their introduction?
Was not the introduction of large ovens made necessary in the popular trade, from the appearance of Stoves with similar shaped ovens to the one now used in the [p. 11] Dispatch...
[but DO THEY WORK? Unequal heat distribution]
[p. 11] "Those desiring to engage in the manufacture or sale of the above Stove, can have the exclusive trade secured them, of a Stove, popular and unlike others in appearance and performance, and furnished with patterns, at a small expense, and at a reasonable premium for the privilege."
[p. 12] DIRECTIONS FOR USE
[Requires a well-fitted pipe and clean flues] "To bake, the damper should be turned up, and the oven acquire a hissing heat, at the lower edge of the Stove, on the side;" -- comparatively simple.
(3) The Legal Record
[T]he complainants had endeavored in good faith to obtain the verdict of a jury in their favor, on a trial at law against the defendants, and had done all in their power at a great expenditure of money and loss of time, to effect that object; that meantime they had lost opportunities of selling out rights in the patent, for no one would buy while the patent was in litigation; that half of the lifetime of the patent was already gone, and the defendants were undoubted infringers, and that under those circumstances, and with the strong disposition manifested of recent years by the courts of the United States to regard patents and patentees more and more with a favoring eye, and to do all in their power to secure to inventors the rewards of their genius against the incursions of pirates (emphasis added), the patent itself must be held to be prima facie evidence of all the complainants claimed under it, and the burden of overthrowing it must rest upon the defendants.
[Circuit Court of the United States, for the Northern District of New York. In Equity. Darius Buck, Nathaniel Wright, Stephen Clark, Shibboleth McCoy and William McCoy v, William Cobb and Jacob Hermance. In The Law Reporter, April 1847, pp. 545-7]
The Canadaigua Trial, 1847
I have not found any report of it yet except Hermance's summary in his Circular, but his success in persuading the jury probably depended in good measure on his luck and persistence in finding a surviving example of Christopher Hoxie's stove, made in the 1820s under his 1815 patent. This anticipated key features of Jonathan Hathaway's, Darius Buck's, and even Hermance's own, i.e. he had secured convincing evidence that none of them was original. Unfortunately by the time of the fourth trial it had been "without my consent or knowledge broken up and destroyed," considerably weakening his case. [Source: Hermance Deposition.]
Notes:
Garret G. Hermance's ads -- evidently an agent for Jordan Mott, New York stove maker. First is from the Albany Gazette, July 1842; second from the Albany Evening Atlas, 30 Jan. 1847, p. 1. |
Albany Daily Argus 22 December 1849, p. 1 -- ad by Hermance's partner, with whom he remained in business between 1848 and 1852. |
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