Manufacturers Index - Page & Co.
Page & Co.
Keene, NH, U.S.A.
Manufacturer Class:
Wood Working Machinery
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.
X6,768
|
Sep. 28, 1831
|
Horse power
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
Of interest because Page patented the mortising machine that was the first product of J. A. Fay & Co. |
X7,484
|
Mar. 13, 1833
|
Mortising machine
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
The patent that was the genesis of what became the largest woodworking machinery maker in its day: J. A. Fay & Co. Inventor Page was apparently not born in Keene. He married Sophia Nye on 1821-10-17. |
X7,714
|
Aug. 14, 1833
|
Cutting and clearing chisel
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
"The cutting and clearing chisel is designed to be used principally in machines for making mortises, when the mortise is to be made in hard wood, one hole should be bored, the diameter which must be the same as the width of the chisel, and the mortise is to be cut to the left or right..." This chisel was presumably designed to fit Page's mortising machine, patent 7,560. |
X8,957
|
Jul. 07, 1835
|
Improved cutting and clearing chisel
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
Wings on the side edges which are not more than 1/16 inch thick and between 2 to 5/16 inches wide, sharpened on the bottom to form the edge of the mortise. Primarily designed for mortising machines, it may also be used by hand. |
X9,505
|
Mar. 13, 1836
|
Mortising in wood
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
Only the patent specification is available; the drawing was lost in a fire at the Patent Office. |
X9,513
|
Mar. 18, 1836
|
Mortising machine
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
Only the patent specification is available; the drawing was lost in a fire at the Patent Office. |
X9,528
|
Mar. 21, 1836
|
Mortising timber
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
Only the patent specification is available; the drawing was lost in a fire at the Patent Office. |
82
|
Nov. 17, 1836
|
Spiral bit with countersink for setting screws
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
There is no patent drawing available. An example of this bit turned up in 2016 on eBay. It is marked "G. PAGE PATENT". Before this patent was issued the inventor had a business, Page & Co., that manufactured his patent mortising machine, but he had sold that business before he invented this countersinking drill bit. |
730
|
May. 08, 1838
|
Geared drill stock
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
From Chuck Zitur's web page, this patent for a "Geared drill stock" is for a "breast drill with a single pinion gear and an additional friction roller which bears against the smooth inner top side of the main gear resulting in less wear to the gears." This patent is the earliest American patent for a geared drill, although the patent specification says that it consists of improvements to designs "that have heretofore been employed."
The inventor had earlier patents for a mortising machine and a combination bit-and-countersink - patent 7,484 and patent 82, respectively. The former patent was the starting point of what became the largest woodworking machinery maker in the world, J. A. Fay & Co., although George Page himself played little or no role in that company.
There was another woodworking machinery inventor named George Page, who lived in Baltimore. While it is possible that they are one and the same person, the most likely scenario is that they were two separate people. See patent 2,174, patent 10,394 and patent 84,937. |
993
|
Oct. 26, 1838
|
Machine for excavating and embanking ditches
|
George Page |
Keene, NH |
Of some interest because the inventor also held an important mortising-machine patent. See patents 7,484 and 82. |
|