Manufacturers Index - R. Hoe & Co.
R. Hoe & Co.
New York, NY, U.S.A.
Company Website: http://www.pacific-hoe.com/
Manufacturer Class:
Wood Working Machinery, Metal Working Machinery & Steam and Gas Engines
This page contains information on patents issued to this manufacturer.
Submitting Patent Information
If you find a patent number or patent date by this manufacturer that is not on this
list, please contact the Site Historian.
Key to Links for Patent Information
USPTO = U.S. Patent Office .
Images of the actual patent can be viewed on the U.S. Patent Office web site but
a special TIFF viewer must be installed with your browser in order properly work.
More information on how to configure your computer to view these patents can be
found at TIFF image Viewers
for Patent Images.
DATAMP = Directory of American Tool And
Machinery Patents . A sister site to VintageMachinery.org with information
on patents related to machinery and tools. A much easier user interface than the
USPTO's for finding information on machinery patents.
X6,178
|
Oct. 04, 1830
|
Printing press
|
Isaac Adams |
Boston, MA |
Most of the patents prior to 1836 were lost in the Dec. 1836 fire. Only about 2,000 of the almost 10,000 documents were recovered. Little is known about this patent. Only the patent drawing is available. This patent is in the database for reference only. |
X7,560
|
Apr. 29, 1833
|
Making fellies
|
James Hamilton |
New York, NY |
This patented design was seen in 2006 in an 8-page catalog on eBay (asking price, $495). The catalog is from 1833 or 1834 and illustrates "Hamilton's sawing and boring machine, and Wiswell's spoke machine". The article quotes a writeup from a committee of the American Institute, which mentions that Hoe & Co. was manufacturing these machines for the New York market, and rights were available for other territories. The Hamilton machine sold for a whopping $350, and requires about 2 horsepower worth of water-power to run. |
X7,849
|
Nov. 19, 1833
|
Spokes
|
Daniel H. Wiswell |
New York, NY |
Most of the patents prior to 1836 were lost in the Dec. 1836 fire, including this one. |
X9,445
|
Mar. 02, 1836
|
Power printing press
|
Isaac Adams |
Boston, MA |
Most of the patents prior to 1836 were lost in the Dec. 1836 fire. Only about 2,000 of the almost 10,000 documents were recovered. Little is known about this patent. Only the patent drawing is available. This patent is in the database for reference only.
In 1858 Adams's business became the property of Hoe & Co., who continued to manufacture the machines with added improvements. In all more than a thousand, in no less than fifty-seven sizes, were sold for use in the United States, some being sent to other countries. In these machines, the type is placed upon an iron bed, after the usual manner of the hand press, and this bed is raised and lowered by straightening and bending a toggle joint by means of a cam, thus giving the impression upon the iron platen fixed above it, and firmly held in position by upright iron rods secured to the bottom bar, a strong cross-piece, at the base of the machine. The ink fountain is at one end of the press; the inking rollers travel twice over the form, in a movable frisket frame, while the bed is down; the paper is taken in by grippers on the frisket and carried over the form, when the bed rises and the impression is given; and finally the sheets pass forward from the frisket by tapes to a sheet flier, which delivers them on the fly board. One thousand sheets per hour is the maximum speed of the larger sizes of the Adams press. Although many of these machines were made and great numbers are still used, and notwithstanding the fact that it was thought by many experienced printers that fine book and cut work could be done.
A Short History of the Printing Press, 1902, pg. 11 |
385
|
Sep. 20, 1837
|
Planing machine
|
Alonzo G. Hull |
Brooklyn, NY |
From Stephen D. Tucker's "History of R. Hoe & Company, 1834-1885". "A machine was built in 1837 for planing boards, and other thin lumber for Dr. A. G. Hull, under his direction. This was an expensive machine and a number of alterations were made. As finally arranged, the lumber was fed forward by a chain and carried first under rotary cutters. It then passed under a stationary knife fitted similar to the 'iron' of a hand plane, which took off a smoothing cut, but trouble was always experienced by this knife occasionally lifting splinters from the lumber. I never heard how this machine succeeded in practical operation." |
2,629
|
May. 20, 1842
|
Double-cylinder printing-press
|
Richard M. Hoe |
New York, NY |
This press could do six thousand pages per hour, which was a significant advancement; Hoe continued to make improvements, until his 1847 version was capable of printing 20,000 complete newspapers per hour. The inventor was a principal of R. Hoe & Co., which made circular sawblades. |
2,656
|
May. 30, 1842
|
Machinery for grinding and polishing metallic surfaces, particularly saw-plates
|
Richard M. Hoe |
New York, NY |
Richard M. Hoe was a principal of saw-maker R. Hoe & Co. This patent was extended for seven years. |
5,188
|
Jul. 10, 1847
|
Improvement in printing-presses
|
Richard M. Hoe |
New York, NY |
The inventor was a principal of printing machinery maker R. Hoe & Co. |
5,200
|
Jul. 24, 1847
|
Improvement in printing-presses
|
Richard M. Hoe |
New York, NY |
The inventor was a principal of prirnting machinery maker R. Hoe & Co. |
5,199
|
Jul. 24, 1847
|
Improvement in rotary printing-presses
|
Richard M. Hoe |
New York, NY |
The inventor was a principal of printing machinery maker R. Hoe & Co. |
5,212
|
Jul. 31, 1847
|
Inking apparatus for printing-presses
|
Richard M. Hoe |
New York, NY |
The inventor was a principal of printing machinery maker R. Hoe & Co. |
116
|
Jun. 13, 1848
|
Printing Press
|
Isaac Adams |
Boston, Suffolk County, MA |
RX patents are reissues of X patents that were destroyed in the Dec. 1836 patent office fire.
In 1858 Adams's business became the property of Hoe & Co., who continued to manufacture the machines with added improvements. In all more than a thousand, in no less than fifty-seven sizes, were sold for use in the United States, some being sent to other countries. In these machines, the type is placed upon an iron bed, after the usual manner of the hand press, and this bed is raised and lowered by straightening and bending a toggle joint by means of a cam, thus giving the impression upon the iron platen fixed above it, and firmly held in position by upright iron rods secured to the bottom bar, a strong cross-piece, at the base of the machine. The ink fountain is at one end of the press; the inking rollers travel twice over the form, in a movable frisket frame, while the bed is down; the paper is taken in by grippers on the frisket and carried over the form, when the bed rises and the impression is given; and finally the sheets pass forward from the frisket by tapes to a sheet flier, which delivers them on the fly board. One thousand sheets per hour is the maximum speed of the larger sizes of the Adams press. Although many of these machines were made and great numbers are still used, and notwithstanding the fact that it was thought by many experienced printers that fine book and cut work could be done.
A Short History of the Printing Press, 1902, pg. 11 |
13,197
|
Jul. 03, 1855
|
Machine for Mitering Printers' Rules
|
William McDonald |
New York, NY |
Applies to beveling the ends of printers' metallic rules for forming miter joints thru use of a shooting board. |
25,199
|
Aug. 23, 1859
|
Feeding paper to printing-presses
|
Richard M. Hoe |
New York, NY |
Of interest because this patent was used by saw maker R. Hoe & Co. |
55,774
|
Jun. 19, 1866
|
Improvement in registering apparatus for printing-presses
|
James Kirk |
Dover, DE |
The assignee also made saws. |
58,664
|
Oct. 09, 1866
|
Improvement in saws
|
Warren P. Miller |
San Francisco, CA |
Insertable tooth that is circular in shape and larger than 180 degrees. |
60,151
|
Dec. 04, 1866
|
Improvement in printers' galleys
|
Alexander T. De Puy |
New York, NY |
|
RE2,899
|
Mar. 17, 1868
|
Improved Machine for Mitering Printers' Rules
|
Wm. McDonald |
New York, NY |
Applies to beveling the ends of printers' metallic rules for forming miter joints thru use of a shooting board.
Believed to been produced due to the reissue of the patent 13 years after the initial patent was awarded. |
77,958
|
May. 19, 1868
|
Improvement in bookbinders' bevelling-machine
|
William P. Chase |
Boston, MA |
The assignee also made saws. |
RE3,066
|
Aug. 04, 1868
|
Improvement in printers' galleys
|
Alexander T. De Puy |
New York, NY |
|
81,811
|
Sep. 01, 1868
|
Improvement in saws
|
Warren P. Miller |
New York, NY |
An improvement on patent 58,664. This patent insertable saw tooth was featured in a display ad in the 1872-10-19 Scientific American; see the "Patent Pictures". |
81,812
|
Sep. 01, 1868
|
Improvement in saws
|
Warren P. Miller |
New York, NY |
|
87,695
|
Mar. 09, 1869
|
Improvement in printing-press fly-frames
|
Theodore H. Mead |
Boston, MA |
The assignee was a maker of printing presses and circular sawblades. |
87,587
|
Mar. 09, 1869
|
Improvement in register-points for printing-presses
|
Andrew Overend |
Philadelphia, PA |
The assignee was a principal of R. Hoe & Co., a maker of printing presses and circular sawblades. |
87,950
|
Mar. 16, 1869
|
Improvement in lithographic-printing presses
|
August Hippolyte Marinoni |
, France |
The assignee was a principal of R. Hoe & Co., maker of printing presses and circular sawblades. |
151,043
|
May. 19, 1874
|
Improvement in saws
|
Warren P. Miller |
New York, NY |
|
155,143
|
Sep. 22, 1874
|
Devices for Cutting Off and Dressing the Ends of Tubes
|
William Chester |
New York, NY |
|
168,338
|
Oct. 05, 1875
|
Improvement in saws
|
Warren P. Miller |
New York, NY |
|
RE8,323
|
Jul. 09, 1878
|
Improvement in insertable-saw-teeth
|
Warren P. Miller |
Brooklyn, NY |
|
211,035
|
Dec. 17, 1878
|
Improvement in saw-teeth
|
Warren P. Miller |
Brooklyn, NY |
|
RE8,534
|
Jan. 07, 1879
|
Improvement in saws
|
Warren P. Miller |
New York, NY |
|
977,474
|
Dec. 06, 1910
|
Movable work-gage for stereotype-trimming machines, &c.
|
Frederick Grafton Lougee |
, England |
A threaded screw engages with a movable rack to which the fence is fastened. The fence can be quickly adjusted by disengaging the rack and re-engaging the screw thread, which forces the adjustment to be an integer multiple of the thread pitch. A fine adjustment knob rotates the screw, which moves the rack and fence. This type of mechanism has since become popular for box joints jigs, such as the Incra I-Box jig. |
|
|
Movable work-gage for stereotype-trimming machines, &c.
|
George F. Read |
, England |
|
1,423,511
|
Jul. 25, 1922
|
Routing tool
|
James N. Baker |
Brooklyn, NY |
|
1,630,671
|
May. 31, 1927
|
Guard for planing machines and the like
|
Andrew J. Retz |
New York, NY |
|
|