Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825

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American inventor.

From the description of Autograph letter signed : New Haven, Ct., to J.C. Calhoun, Secretary of War., 1824 May 3. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 270872501

Eli Whitney (1765-1825), American inventor and gun manufacturer, received his patent for the first cotton gin in 1794.

From the description of Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825 (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration). naId: 10580711

Whitney, American inventor, especially known for the cotton gin.

From the description of [Letter] 1816 Nov. 17, N. York [to] Wm. W. Woolsey / E. Whitney. (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 469106636

Inventor.

From the description of Eli Whitney correspondence, 1805 April 4. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 70981361

Eli Whitney was born in Westborough, Massachusetts, on December 8, 1765. After graduation from Yale College in 1792, Whitney spent a year in Georgia where he designed and tested a model cotton gin and formed a partnership with Phineas Miller to gin and sell cotton. Though his invention revolutionized agriculture in the South, Whitney received practically no financial return for his invention. Whitney returned to New Haven in 1794 and in 1798 began manufacturing firearms under contract to the federal government. In his factory, Whitney developed a manufacturing system based on the production of interchangeable parts. Whitney married Henrietta Frances Edwards in 1817. He died on January 8, 1825.

From the description of Eli Whitney papers, 1716-1959 (inclusive), 1785-1881 (bulk). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 145078906

From the description of Eli Whitney papers, 1716-1959 (inclusive), 1785-1881 (bulk). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702168109

Inventor of the cotton gin.

From the description of Letter, 1818. (Duke University Library). WorldCat record id: 39522007

Eli Whitney was born in Westborough, Massachusetts on December 8, 1765. After graduation from Yale College in 1792, Whitney spent a year in Georgia where he designed and tested a model cotton gin and formed a partnership with Phineas Miller to gin and sell cotton. Though his invention revolutionized agriculture in the South, Whitney received practically no financial return for his invention. Whitney returned to New Haven in 1794 and in 1798 began manufacturing firearms under contract to the federal government. In his factory, Whitney developed a manufacturing system based on the production of interchangeable parts. Whitney married Henrietta Frances Edwards in 1817. He died on January 8, 1825.

Eli Whitney was born in Westborough, Massachusetts, the son of Eli and Elizabeth (Fay) Whitney. As a boy, Whitney was occupied with all manner of manufacturing schemes, and he persuaded his father to let him continue in mechanical work rather than in preparation for college. He made and repaired violins in the neighborhood, worked in iron, and at the age of fifteen began the manufacture of nails in his father's shop. He continued this enterprise for two winters, even hiring a helper to fill his orders. When the demand for nails declined at the close of the Revolutionary War, he turned to making hatpins and almost monopolized that business in his section of the state. By the time he was eighteen his ideas regarding a college education had changed, but when he broached the subject to his father the latter thought him too old to begin the preparatory studies and, furthermore, was not then in a position to provide the necessary funds.

Whitney's mind was made up, however, and to obtain the funds he taught school in Grafton, Northboro, Westboro, and Paxton, and with the money thus earned attended Leicester Academy, Leicester, Massachusetts, during the summer. He entered Yale College in May 1789, at the age of twenty-three. During his three years there he studied diligently, and to augment the funds sent him by his father repaired apparatus and equipment about the college. After his graduation in the autumn of 1792, having decided to become a lawyer, Whitney went South to accept a position as tutor in a gentleman's family, with the understanding that he could devote a portion of his time to reading law.

On the boat which he took to Savannah he met the widow of General Nathanael Greene, with her family and Phineas Miller, the manager of her plantation. On his arrival at Savannah, Whitney learned that his prospective employer had hired another tutor, and Mrs. Greene invited him to be her guest. He gratefully accepted and began his law studies, grasping every opportunity to show his appreciation for the kindness of his hostess by making and repairing things about the house and plantation.

During the winter a group of gentlemen who had served under General Greene in the Revolution came to visit Mrs. Greene, and one evening were discussing the deplorable state of agriculture in the South. Large areas of land were unsuitable for growing of rice or long-staple cotton, although they yielded large crops of green seed cotton. This was an unprofitable crop, however, because the process of separating the cotton from its seed by hand was so tedious that it took one workman a whole day to obtain a pound of staple. One of the gentlemen remarked that the agricultural troubles of the inland portions of the South would be eliminated if some machine could be devised to facilitate the process of cleaning the green seed cotton. Mrs. Greene, there upon, who had observed Whitney's ingenuity with tools, suggested that he was the person to make such a machine, and forthwith he turned his attention to the problem. Within ten days he had designed a cotton gin and completed an imperfect model in accordance with his plan. He experimented with this model, and by April 1793 had built a larger, improved machine with which one person could produce fifty pounds of cleaned cotton in a day.

Having indicated the means to the end sought by Mrs. Greene's friends, thus fulfilling in part his many obligations to her, Whitney intended to resume his study of the law, but he was persuaded by Phineas Miller to continue work on the cotton gin with a view to patenting the idea and engaging in the manufacture of the new machine. The two men drew up a partnership agreement on May 27, 1793, to engage in the patenting and manufacturing of cotton gins and to conduct a cotton ginning business. Meanwhile the knowledge that Whitney had built a machine to clean cotton spread and multitudes came from all quarters to see the gin. Before Whitney could secure his patent a number of imitations were in successful operation.

Whitney returned to New Haven to perfect, patent, and manufacture his gin as soon as possible. He first made oath to the invention on October 28, 1793, obtained his patent March 14, 1794, and immediately began making cotton gins and shipping them to Miller in Georgia. The partners planned to buy the cotton seed themselves, gin it, and sell the product, because they felt that, protected by a patent, they could maintain a monopoly. This policy proved to be extremely disadvantageous, however, for they could not produce enough machines to gin the rapidly increasing crops and competitors' machines were rapidly being put into operation.

The most formidable rival machine was that of Hodgen Holmes, in which circular saws were used instead of the drum with inserted wires of Whitney's original machine. Whitney later proved that the idea of such teeth had occurred to him, but it was some years before he established his right over the Holmes gin. The partners had difficulty in raising money and had to pay interest rates of from twelve to twenty-five percent. Furthermore, word came from England that manufacturers were condemning the cotton cleaned by Whitney's gins on the ground that the staple was injured. This news brought their business and the thirty gins operating in Georgia to a two year standstill while Miller and Whitney worked to prove this judgement in error.

In 1797 the first infringement suit was tried unsuccessfully, and it was not until 1807 that Whitney obtained a favorable decision. This decision was confirmed by several subsequent decisions, and thenceforth Whitney's patent was not questioned. Meanwhile, however, in 1795 his shops had been destroyed by fire; the legislatures of South Carolina and Tennessee which in 1801 and 1802 respectively had voted to purchase patent rights suddenly annulled the contracts; and in 1803 Miller died, disappointed and broken by the struggle.

Whitney continued alone for nine years more, and in 1812 made application to Congress for the renewal of his patent. In spite of the logical arguments which he advanced in his petition, the request was refused. There is probably no other instance in the history of invention of the letting loose of such tremendous industrial forces so suddenly as occurred with the invention of the cotton gin. In 1792 the United States exported 138,328 pounds of cotton; in 1794, the year Whitney patented his gin, 1,601,000 pounds were exported; the following year, 6,276,000 pounds; and by 1800, the production of cotton in the United States had risen to 35,000,000 pounds of which 17,790,000 were exported. Yet Whitney received practically no return for the invention which was due to him alone.

He was a clear-sighted business man as well as an inventor, however, and was quick to realize the mistake he and Miller had made in attempting to monopolize the ginning business. He was so thoroughly convinced that he would never obtain any money from his invention of the cotton gin that as early as 1798 he made up his mind that he had to turn to something else. He chose the manufacture of firearms, and on January 14, 1798, obtained from the federal government a contract for "ten thousand stand of arms" to be delivered in two years. Whitney was not a gunsmith, but he proposed to manufacture guns by a new method, his aim being "to make the same parts of different guns, as the locks, for example, as much like each other as the successive impressions of a copper-plate engraving." This was perhaps the first, certainly one of the first suggestions of the system of interchangeable parts which has been of tremendous significance in industrial development.

Whitney's mechanical ingenuity and inventive capacity had been so thoroughly demonstrated, and his reputation for character was so high, that he had no difficulty in finding ten individuals in New Haven to go his bond and furnish the initial capital for the new undertaking. Purchasing a mill site just outside of New Haven, now Whitneyville, he built a factory and began the design and construction of the necessary machinery to carry out his schemes. Because of the extremely low state of the mechanic arts, his difficulties were innumerable. There were no similar establishments upon which branches of his own business might lean; there were not experienced workmen to give him any assistance; and he had to make by himself practically every machine and tool required. The expense incurred and time expended in getting the factory into operation greatly exceeded his expectations, but the confidence of his financial backers and the government seems never to have wavered. At the end of the first year after the contract was made, instead of 4,000 muskets, only 500 were delivered, and it was eight years instead of two before the contract was complete. So liberal was the government in making advances to Whitney that the final balance due him amounted to little more than $2,200 out of the original sum of $134,000. Whitney, however, had accomplished that which he had set out to do. Workmen with little or no experience could operate his machinery and with it turn out by the hundreds the various parts of a musket. Whitney had succeeded in reducing an extremely complex process to what amounted to a succession of simple operations. By his tenacity he so perfected the manufacture of arms that with the subsequent adoption of his system in the two federal armories, the government saved $25,000 annually. In 1812 he entered into a second contract with the federal government to manufacture 15,000 firearms, and contracted to make a similar quantity for the state of New York, and thereafter his unique manufactory yielded him a just reward. The business which he started employed some sixty men, and at the time the works were built he erected a row of substantial stone houses for his workmen which are said to have been the first workmen's houses erected by an employer in the United States.

On January 6, 1817, in New Haven, Whitney married Henrietta Frances Edwards, who with three children survived him.

Extracted from: Dictionary of American Biography

From the guide to the Eli Whitney papers, 1716-1959, 1785-1881, (Manuscripts and Archives)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Dwight family. Dwight family papers, 1713-1937 (inclusive). Yale University Library
creatorOf Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Papers of the Randolph family of Edgehill [manuscript] 1749(1790-1850)1886. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn Latta, Frank Forrest, 1892-. Frank F. Latta Collection: Skyfarming, 1802-1982 (bulk) 1860-1975. Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens
referencedIn Wolcott, Oliver, 1760-1833. Papers of Oliver Wolcott, 1759-1837. Library of Congress
referencedIn Miller, Phineas. Letter, 1793 May 27, Mulberry Grove, Georgia to Tho[ma]s Jefferson, n.p. William & Mary Libraries
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Letter, 1818. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins Library
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Eli Whitney papers, 1716-1959 (inclusive), 1785-1881 (bulk). Yale University Library
referencedIn Hillhouse family. Hillhouse family papers, 1707-1943 (inclusive), 1771-1938 (bulk). Yale University Library
referencedIn Wolcott, Oliver [and] Co. Account books, 1804-1815. New-York Historical Society
referencedIn American Steel & Wire Co. Records of American Steel and Wire Company and its predecessors, 1822-1936 (inclusive). Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker Library
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Papers. Smithsonian Institution. Libraries
referencedIn Jacob Eliot family papers, 1716-1945 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
creatorOf Battles, D. Blake,. Papers. Ohio History Connection, Ohio Historical Society
referencedIn National and local historic figures, 1638-1980. New Haven Colony Historical Society Library
referencedIn Blake family. Blake family papers, 1773-1921 (inclusive). Yale University Library
referencedIn Daggett, David, 1764-1851. David Daggett papers, 1781-1851 (inclusive). Yale University Library
creatorOf Rutledge, John, 1766-1819. [Letters] / John Rutledge. Smith College, Neilson Library
referencedIn American Steel & Wire Co. Records of American Steel and Wire Company and its predecessors, 1822-1936 (inclusive) [microform]. Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker Library
creatorOf Records of the Office of the Chief of Ordnance. 1797 - 1988. Contracts for Ordnance, Supplies, and Construction National Archives at Boston
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Eli Whitney collection, 1816-1980. Hamden Historical Society
referencedIn Dutilh & Wachsmuth (Philadelphia, Pa.). Records, 1772-1875. Hagley Museum & Library
referencedIn Yale University. Library. Eli Whitney letters and detail drawings 1792-1890 Georgia Historical Society
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Eli Whitney letter and memorandum, 1799 March 12, New Haven, Conn. to John Adam, Canaan, Conn. Connecticut Historical Society
referencedIn Andrews, Garnett, 1798-1873. Garnett Andrews letters, 1852-1869. Georgia Historical Society
referencedIn Blake family papers, 1773-1921 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
referencedIn David Daggett papers, 1781-1851 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
referencedIn Capps, Velma Pool, Collection 64-014; 64-116; 65-160; 66-002; 67-170; 68-058; 71-046; 72-116., 1781-1964, undated Dolph Briscoe Center for American History
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Eli Whitney correspondence, 1805 April 4. Library of Congress
referencedIn Latham, Jean Lee. The story of Eli Whitney : invention and progress in the young nation : production material. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
referencedIn Dearborn, Henry, 1751-1829. Henry Dearborn microfilm collection, 1801-1812 (inclusive), [microform]. Yale University Library
referencedIn Hillhouse family papers, 1707-1943 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
referencedIn Green, Constance McLaughlin, 1897-1975. Papers, 1954-1959. Smith College, Neilson Library
referencedIn Wheelock, Moses Bond, 1768-1848. Diary, 1788-1789. American Antiquarian Society
referencedIn Woolsey family papers, 1750-1969 (bulk 1811-1921) Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
creatorOf Records of the Patent and Trademark Office. 1836 - 1978. Restored Patent Drawings.. 1837 - 1847. Eli Whitney's Cotton Gin Patent Drawing National Archives at College Park
creatorOf Eli Whitney papers, 1716-1959, 1785-1881 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
referencedIn Capps, Velma Pool, 1902-1977. Capps, Velma Pool, Collection, 1781-1964, undated University of Texas Libraries
referencedIn Joseph Bradley Murray collection, 1706-1958 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
creatorOf Records of the Office of the Chief of Ordnance. 1797 - 1988. Letters Received National Archives at Boston
referencedIn Spinner, Francis Elias, 1802-1890. Letter : Mohawk, [N.Y.], to Willis Patten, n.p., 1852 Aug. 23. University of Chicago Library
creatorOf Richard John Levy and Sally Waldman Sweet collection, 1766-1935 New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. [Letter] 1816 Nov. 17, N. York [to] Wm. W. Woolsey / E. Whitney. Smith College, Neilson Library
referencedIn Woolsey family papers, 1750-1969 (bulk 1811-1921) Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Autograph letter signed : New Haven, Ct., to J.C. Calhoun, Secretary of War., 1824 May 3. Pierpont Morgan Library.
referencedIn Records of District Courts of the United States. 1685 - 2009. Law, Equity, Criminal, Habeas Corpus, and Admiralty Case Files National Archives at Atlanta
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Eli Whitney papers, 1716-1959 (inclusive), 1785-1881 (bulk). Yale University Library
creatorOf Wolcott, Oliver, 1760-1833. [Letters] 1799-1811 / Oliv: Wolcott. Smith College, Neilson Library
referencedIn Murray, Joseph Bradley, 1888-1961,. Joseph Bradley Murray collection, 1706-1958 (inclusive). Yale University Library
referencedIn Dwight family papers, 1713-1937 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
referencedIn White-Forbes family. Diaries, 1808-1902. American Antiquarian Society
referencedIn Constance McLaughlin Green Papers MS 67., 1954-1959 Sophia Smith Collection
referencedIn Spinner, Francis Elias, 1802-1890. Letter : Mohawk, [N.Y.], to Willis Patten, n.p., 1852 Aug. 23. Texas Christian University
referencedIn Pitkin, Timothy, 1766-1847. Papers of Timothy Pitkin, 1681-1847 (bulk 1800-1830). Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens
referencedIn Richard John Levy and Sally Waldman Sweet collection, 1766-1935 New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division
referencedIn New York (State). Governor (1807-1817 : Tompkins). Gubernatorial and personal records, 1792-1823. New York State Archives
referencedIn Woolsey family papers, 1750-1969 (bulk 1811-1921) Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
referencedIn Morse family. Morse family papers, 1779-1868 (inclusive). Yale University Library
referencedIn Phillips, Wendell, 1811-1884. Papers, 1555-1882 (bulk: 1833-1881) Houghton Library
referencedIn William L. Hamburger prints collection [manuscript], 1928-1940. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn Thomas, Thomas W., fl. 1834-1863. Thomas papers, 1809-1915, 1834-1864. William & Mary Libraries
referencedIn Eliot, Jacob, 1700-1766. Jacob Eliot family papers, 1716-1945 (inclusive). Yale University Library
creatorOf Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825. Eli Whitney letter and receipts, 1813-1815. Connecticut Historical Society
referencedIn Morse Family Papers, 1779-1868 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
referencedIn Sparks, Jared, 1789-1866. Portrait collection, ca. 1600-1850 Cornell University Library
referencedIn Transylvania College Library. Jefferson Davis Collection.
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Adam, John, 1755-1844. person
associatedWith American Steel & Wire Co. corporateBody
associatedWith American Steel & Wire Co. corporateBody
associatedWith Andrews, Garnett, 1798-1873. person
associatedWith Battles, D. Blake, person
associatedWith Blake, Eli W. (Eli Whitney), 1795-1886. person
associatedWith Blake family. family
associatedWith Blake family. family
associatedWith Calhoun, John C. (John Caldwell), 1782-1850, person
associatedWith Capps, Velma Pool, 1902-1977 person
associatedWith Daggett, David, 1764-1851. person
associatedWith Dearborn, Henry, 1751-1829. person
associatedWith Dibner, Bern, person
associatedWith Dutilh & Wachsmuth (Philadelphia, Pa.) corporateBody
associatedWith Dwight family. family
associatedWith Dwight family. family
associatedWith Edwards, Henry W. (Henry Waggaman), 1779-1847. person
associatedWith Eliot, Jacob, 1700-1766. person
associatedWith Eliot, Jacob, 1734-1785 person
associatedWith Fulton, Robert, 1765-1815. person
associatedWith Goodrich, James. person
associatedWith Goodrich, James. person
associatedWith Green, Constance McLaughlin, 1897- person
associatedWith Greene, Catharine Littlefield. person
correspondedWith Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878 person
associatedWith Hillhouse family. family
associatedWith Hillhouse family. family
associatedWith Hillhouse, James, 1754-1832. person
associatedWith Irvine, Callender. person
associatedWith Irvine, Callender, d. 1841. person
associatedWith Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. person
associatedWith Kollock, Lemuel. person
associatedWith Kollock, Lemuel. person
associatedWith Latham, Jean Lee. person
associatedWith Latta, Frank Forrest, 1892- person
associatedWith Lee, Roswell, 1777-1833. person
associatedWith Levy, Richard John person
associatedWith Levy, Richard John, person
associatedWith Miller, Catherine Littlefield Greene, 1755-1814 person
associatedWith Miller, Phineas. person
associatedWith Miller, Phineas, 1764-1803. person
associatedWith Mix, John, 1751-1820. person
associatedWith Morse family. family
associatedWith Morse Family family
associatedWith Murray, Joseph Bradley, 1888-1961, person
associatedWith New Haven Water Company. corporateBody
associatedWith New York (State). Governor (1807-1817 : Tompkins) corporateBody
correspondedWith Phillips, Wendell, 1811-1884 person
correspondedWith Pitkin, Timothy, 1766-1847. person
associatedWith Princeton University corporateBody
associatedWith Princeton University. Students. corporateBody
associatedWith Rutledge, John, 1766-1819. person
associatedWith Sparks, Jared, 1789-1866, person
associatedWith Spinner, Francis Elias, 1802-1890. person
associatedWith Stebbins, Josiah, 1766-1829. person
associatedWith United States. Dept. of the Treasury corporateBody
associatedWith Wadsworth, Decius, 1768-1821. person
associatedWith Wheelock, Moses Bond, 1768-1848. person
associatedWith White-Forbes family. family
associatedWith Whitney, Eli, 1820-1895. person
associatedWith Whitney, Josiah, 1770-1839. person
associatedWith Wolcott, Oliver, 1760-1833. person
associatedWith Wolcott, Oliver [and] Co. corporateBody
associatedWith Woolsey family. family
associatedWith Woolsey family. family
associatedWith Woolsey family. family
associatedWith Woolsey, William Walton, 1766-1839, person
associatedWith Yale College, 1718-1887. Class of 1792. corporateBody
associatedWith Yale University. Class of 1792. corporateBody
associatedWith Yale University. Library. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Georgia
New Haven (Conn.)
New Haven (Conn.)
New Haven (Conn.)
Westborough (Mass.)
United States
United States
Connecticut--Canaan
Westborough (Mass.)
New Haven (Conn.)
United States
Southern States
Westborough (Mass.)
Georgia
Southern States
Connecticut
Southern States
Georgia
Subject
Aromatic plants
Assembly-line methods
Business
Cotton gins and ginning
Defense contracts
Firearms industry and trade
Firearms industry and trade
Firearms industry and trade
Herbs
Iron industry and trade
Patents
Patents
Plantations
Plantations
Women
Women
Occupation
Businessmen
Inventors
Activity

Person

Birth 1765-12-08

Death 1825-01-08

English

Information

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