Daily Almanac for
Oct 7, 2008
Search White Pages
Info search tips
Bio search tips

Encyclopedia

Whitney, Eli

Whitney, Eli, 17651825, American inventor of the cotton gin, b. Westboro, Mass., grad. Yale, 1792. When he was staying as tutor at Mulberry Grove, the plantation of Mrs. Nathanael Greene, Whitney was encouraged by Mrs. Greene and visiting cotton planters to try to find some device by which the fiber of short-staple cotton could be rapidly separated from the seed. Whitney, whose creative mechanical bent had been evident from boyhood, completed his model gin early in 1793, after about 10 days of work, and by April had built an improved one. With Phineas Miller, Mrs. Greene's plantation manager (and later her husband), he formed a partnership to manufacture gins at New Haven. He was unable to make enough gins to meet the demand, and although the partners received a patent in 1794, others copied his model and soon many gins were in use. After much litigation the partners received (1807) a favorable decision to protect their patent, but Congress in 1812 denied Whitney's petition for its renewal. His invention, which had immense economic and social effects, brought great wealth to many others, but little to Whitney himself. In 1798 he built a firearms factory near New Haven. The muskets his workmen made by methods comparable to those of modern mass industrial production were the first to have standardized, interchangeable parts.

See biographies by J. Mirsky and A. Nevins (1962) and D. Olmsted (1846, repr. 1972); C. M. Green, Eli Whitney and the Birth of American Technology (1956).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

    • Cite
    • Print
    • Bookmark

More on Eli Whitney from Infoplease:

  • Eli Whitney - Eli Whitney Born: 1765 Birthplace: Westboro, Mass. Cotton gin—Whitney invented the cotton ...
  • Eli Whitney - Eli Whitney Born: 1765 Birthplace: Westboro, Mass. Cotton gin—Whitney invented the cotton ...
  • Whitney: meaning and definitions - Whitney: Definition and Pronunciation
  • December 8 Birthdays: Eli Whitney - December 8 birthdays: Eli Whitney, Lee J. Cobb, Jean Sibelius, Aristide Maillol, Mary, Queen of Scots, Christina, William C. Durant, Sinead O'Connor, Teri Hatcher, Kim Basinger, Jim Morrison, David Carradine, Sammy Davis, Jr., James Thurber, Diego Rivera
  • Eli Whitney - Biography of Eli Whitney, Inventor of the cotton gin

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Technology: Biographies


Premium Partner Content
HighBeam Research

Related content from HighBeam Research on: Eli Whitney

Eli Whitney Armory named ASM Historical Landmark.(ASM News) (Advanced Materials & Processes)

Dan Ariens receives Eli Whitney Productivity Award from Society of Manufacturing Engineers.(Personnel News) (Landscape & Irrigation)

Antinozzi Associates, Stratford, an architectural and interior design firm, was selected by the Connecticut Department of Public Works for the $57 million upgrade of Eli Whitney Connecticut Technical High School in Hamden.(Credits, Clients and Awards)(Brief Article) (Fairfield County Business Journal)

Arden L. Bement, Jr., FASM, director, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), U.S. Department of Commerce, and acting director, National Science Foundation, has been awarded the Eli Whitney Productivity Award from the Society of Manufacturing Engineers.(Members In The News) (Advanced Materials & Processes)

The founding entrepreneurs: America's prosperity.(Thomas Smythe, Will Rolf, Robert Fulton, Francis Cabot Lowell, Eli Whitney, Cyrus McCormick, John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie ) (Social Education)

What would Eli Whitney think? (Resource: Engineering & Technology for a Sustainable World)

Former ASM President Eli Bradley dies at 90.(Elihu F. Bradley)(American Society for Metals)(In memoriam)(Brief article) (Advanced Materials & Processes)

New Medicare law draws providers to DRTV.(JORDAN WHITNEY'S PRODUCT TRENDS) (Response)

Four metalworking pioneers join Machine Tool Hall of Fame. (American Machinist)

Inventing the Cotton Gin: Machine and Myth in Antebellum America (South Carolina Historical Magazine)

Additional search results provided by HighBeam Research, LLC. © Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.