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.
2,999
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Jan. 13, 1874
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Blind slat machine
|
Major Harper |
ON, Canada |
The inventors are all described as "machinists". |
|
|
Blind slat machine
|
Stephen Grose |
ON, Canada |
|
|
|
Blind slat machine
|
William Wallace Byam |
ON, Canada |
|
3,000
|
Jan. 13, 1874
|
Venetian blind
|
Major Harper |
ON, Canada |
The inventors are all described as "machinists". |
|
|
Venetian blind
|
Stephen Grose |
ON, Canada |
|
|
|
Venetian blind
|
William Wallace Byam |
ON, Canada |
|
83,415
|
Oct. 13, 1903
|
Planing machine
|
Major Harper |
ON, Canada |
|
102,366
|
Dec. 04, 1906
|
Wood planing machinery
|
Charles Ernest Harper |
ON, Canada |
|
854,642
|
May. 21, 1907
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Feed-roll for wood-planing machines
|
Charles Ernest Harper |
ON, Canada |
Charles Ernest Harper (1867 to 1944-02-27) was a son of Major Harper (1835-11-01 to 1917-04-27). C. Ernest Harper was mayor of Whitby in 1918, 1920, and 1921. An online document giving a walking tour of Whitby includes the following. "205 Perry St. was built in the 1850s by Major Harper, a machinist, who along with Stephen Gross, established a planing mill a block west at Brock St. in 1853. Thus equipped, he and his stepfather did all the woodwork in the new County Court House (#14) and all the Grand Trunk Railway Stations from Toronto to Cobourg which were built in 1856. Later, he operated a machine shop around the corner in what is now Rousseau's Heritage House at 216 Mary St. E. Here, he developed new woodworking machinery and manufactured shells during the 1st World War. Harper was Whitby's Police Magistrate from 1881 until his death in 1917." |