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Elisha Otis

Elisha Graves Otis

Elisha Graves Otis
Personal information
Name Elisha Graves Otis
Birth date August 3, 1811
Birth place Halifax, Vermont, United States
Date of death April 8, 1861
Work
Significant projects elevators

Elisha Graves Otis (August 3, 1811April 8, 1861) invented a safety device that prevented elevators from falling if the hoisting cable broke.[1] He worked on this device while living in Yonkers, New York in 1852, and had a finished product in 1854.

Biography

Otis was born in Ontario, Canada to Stephen Otis, Jr. and Pheobe Glynn.[1] He moved away from home at the age of 17, eventually settling in Troy, New York, where he lived for 5 years employed as a wagon driver. In 1834, he married Susan A. Houghton who gave birth to their first child. Later that year, Otis suffered a terrible case of pneumonia which nearly killed him, but he earned enough money to move his wife and three year old son to the Vermont Hills on the Green River. He designed and built his own gristmill, but did not earn enough money, so he converted it into a sawmill, but still did not attract customers. Now having a second son, he started building wagons and carriages, at which he was fairly skilled. His wife later died, leaving Otis with two sons aged seven and two. At thirty-four years old, and hoping for a fresh start, he married Betsy A. Boyd and moved to Albany, New York. He got a job as a bedstead maker for Otis Tingely. He was skilled as a craftsman, and, tired of working all day to make only twelve bedsteads, he invented and patented a rail turner. It could produce bedsteads four times faster than a person could manually do; about fifty. His boss gave him a $500 bonus, and Otis then moved into his own business. At his leased building, he started designing a safety brake that could stop trains instantly and an automatic bread baking oven. The city of Albany then cut off his power source by diverting the stream he was using for the population's fresh water supply. In 1856, having no more use for Albany, he first moved to Bergen City, New Jersey to work as a mechanic, then to Yonkers, New York as a manager of an abandoned sawmill which he was supposed to convert into a bedstead factory. He was forty, and when he started to clean up the factory, he wondered how he could get all the old debris up to the upper levels of the factory. He heard of hoisting platforms, but they often broke, and he didn't want to take any chances. He and his sons, who were also tinkerers, designed their own "safety elevator" and tested it successfully. He thought so little of it he neither patented it nor requested a bonus from his superiors for it, nor try to sell it to anyone else. After having several sales, and after the bedstead factory declined, Otis took the opportunity to make an elevator company out of it, later called Otis Steam Elevator Works. No orders came over the next several months. Then, the 1853 New York World's Fair offered a great chance at publicity.[2] At the New York Crystal Palace, Elisha Otis amazed a crowd when he ordered the only rope holding the platform on which he was standing cut.[1] The rope was severed by an axeman, and the platform fell only a few inches before coming to a halt. After the World's Fair, Otis received continuous orders, doubling each year. Elisha started developing different types of engines, like a three-way steam valve engine which could make the elevator transition from up, down, and to stop it at lightning quick speeds. In his spare time, he designed and experimented with his old designs of bread-baking ovens and train brakes, and patented a steam plow in 1857, a rotary oven in 1858, and, with Charles, the oscillating steam engine in 1860. For the remainder of his life, all the major corporations purchased Otis's invention and recognized his genius. Sadly, Otis contracted AIDS and died on April 8, 1861.[1]

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Related

  • Otis Elevator Company
  • United Technologies Corporation
  • William Otis

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Elisha Graves Otis". Invent Now. http://www.invent.org/hall_of_fame/115.html. Retrieved 2007-12-18. 
  2. ^ "Elisha Otis". Encyclopædia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9057648/Elisha-Graves-Otis. Retrieved 2007-12-18.