Eli Whitney and the Need for an Invention
As
Eli Whitney left New England and headed South in 1792, he had no
idea that within the next seven months he would invent a machine
that would profoundly alter the course of American history. A recent
graduate of Yale, Whitney had given some thought to becoming a lawyer.
But, like many college graduates of today, he had debts to repay
first and needed a job. Reluctantly, he left his native Massachusetts
to assume the position of private tutor on a plantation in Georgia.

There
Whitney quickly learned that Southern planters were in desperate
need of a way to make the growing of cotton profitable. Long-staple
cotton, which was easy to separate from its seeds, could be grown
only along the coast. The one variety that grew inland had sticky
green seeds that were time-consuming to pick out of the fluffy white
cotton bolls. Whitney was encouraged to find a solution to this
problem by his employer, Catherine Greene, whose support, both moral
and financial were critical to this effort. At stake was the success
of cotton planting throughout the South, especially important at
a time when tobacco was declining in profit due to over-supply and
soil exhaustion.
Whitney
knew that if he could invent such a machine, he could apply to the
federal government for a patent. If granted, he would have exclusive
rights to his invention for 14 years (today it is 20 years), and
he could hope to reap a handsome profit from it.
The
Constitution and Patent Law
In
Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 , the Constitution empowers Congress
"To promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing
for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to
their respective writings and discoveries." Patent law must
carefully balance the rights of the inventor to profit from his
or her invention (through the grant of a temporary monopoly) against
the needs of society at large to benefit from new ideas.
The
patent bill of 1790 enabled the government to patent "any useful
art, manufacture, engine, machine, or device, or any instrument
thereon not before known or used." The patent act of 1793 gave
the secretary of state the power to issue a patent to anyone who
presented working drawings, a written description, a model, and
paid an application fee. Over time the requirements and procedures
have changed. Today the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is under
the auspices of the Commerce Department.
Eli
Whitney Patents His Cotton Gin
In
hopes of making a patentable machine, Whitney put aside his plans
to study law and instead tinkered throughout the winter and spring
in a secret workshop provided by Catherine Greene. Within months
he created the cotton gin. A small gin could be hand-cranked; larger
versions could be harnessed to a horse or driven by water power.
"One man and a horse will do more than fifty men with the old
machines," wrote Whitney to his father. . . . "Tis generally
said by those who know anything about it, that I shall make a Fortune
by it."

click for animated patent
drawing
But
patenting an invention and making a profit from it are two different
things. After considering possible options, Whitney and his business
partner, Phineas Miller, opted to produce as many gins as possible,
install them throughout Georgia and the South, and charge farmers
a fee for doing the ginning for them. Their charge was two-fifths
of the profit -- paid to them in cotton itself.
And
here, all their troubles began. Farmers throughout Georgia resented
having to go to Whitney's gins where they had to pay what they regarded
as an exorbitant tax. Instead planters began making their own versions
of Whitney's gin and claiming they were "new" inventions.
Miller brought costly suits against the owners of these pirated
versions but because of a loophole in the wording of the 1793 patent
act, they were unable to win any suits until 1800, when the law
was changed.
Struggling
to make a profit and mired in legal battles, the partners finally
agreed to license gins at a reasonable price. In 1802 South Carolina
agreed to purchase Whitney's patent right for $50,000 but delayed
in paying it. The partners also arranged to sell the patent rights
to North Carolina and Tennessee. By the time even the Georgia courts
recognized the wrongs done to Whitney, only one year of his patent
remained. In 1808 and again in 1812 he humbly petitioned Congress
for a renewal of his patent.
The
Effects of the Cotton Gin
After
the invention of the cotton gin, the yield of raw cotton doubled
each decade after 1800. Demand was fueled by other inventions of
the Industrial Revolution, such as the machines to spin and weave
it and the steamboat to transport it. By mid century America was
growing three-quarters of the world's supply of cotton, most of
it shipped to England or New England where it was manufactured into
cloth. During this time tobacco fell in value, rice exports at best
stayed steady, and sugar began to thrive, but only in Louisiana.
At mid century the South provided three-fifths of America's exports
-- most of it in cotton.
However,
like many inventors, Whitney (who died in 1825) could not have foreseen
the ways in which his invention would change society for the worse.
The most significant of these was the growth of slavery. While it
was true that the cotton gin reduced the labor of removing seeds,
it did not reduce the need for slaves to grow and pick the cotton.
In fact, the opposite occurred. Cotton growing became so profitable
for the planters that it greatly increased their demand for both
land and slave labor. In 1790 there were six slave states; in 1860
there were 15. From 1790 until Congress banned the importation of
slaves from Africa in 1808, Southerners imported 80,000 Africans.
By 1860 approximately one in three Southerners was a slave.
Because
of the cotton gin, slaves now labored on ever-larger plantations
where work was more regimented and relentless. As large plantations
spread into the Southwest, the price of slaves and land inhibited
the growth of cities and industries. In the 1850s seven-eighths
of all immigrants settled in the North, where they found 72% of
the nation's manufacturing capacity. The growth of the "peculiar
institution" was affecting many aspects of Southern life.
Epilogue
While
Eli Whitney is best remembered as the inventor of the cotton gin,
it is often forgotten that he was also the father of the mass production
method. In 1798 he figured out how to manufacture muskets by machine
so that the parts were interchangeable. It was as a manufacturer
of muskets that Whitney finally became rich. If his genius led King
Cotton to triumph in the South, it also created the technology with
which the North won the Civil War.
For
Further Reading
Caney,
Steven. Steven Caney's Invention Book. New York: Workman Publishers,
1985. (Interesting case histories.)
Green,
Constance M. Eli Whitney and the Birth of American Technology. Reading,
MA: Addison Wesley Educational Publishers, 1965. (Still available
in paper.)
Mirsky,
Jeannette and Allan Nevins. The World of Eli Whitney. New York:
Macmillan Co., 1952.
Murphy,
Jim. Weird and Wacky Inventions. New York: Crown Publishers, 1978.
(Includes drawings of unusual inventions submitted to the Patent
Office with clues to aid the reader in guessing the invention.)
Text
taken entirely from:
http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/cotton-gin-patent/
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