Patents, 1874, 1917, 1927, 1931, 1934-1936, 1938-39,1940
Scope and Contents
This folder contains: Patent # 152, 903 – 152,903: Improvement in Treating Textile Fabrics to Prevent Mildew and Decay
Patented June 5 1917 – 1,228,458: Isaac S. McGiehan, of New York - Process of Impregnating Fabrics with Rubber Patented April, 4, 1922 – 1,411,786: Ernest Hopkinson of New York - Process of Treating Fibrous Material and Product
Patented Nov. 1, 1927 – 1,647,435: John H. Clewell, Jr., of Arlington, New Jersey - Actinismproof Cellulose-Ester Composition
Patented April 21, 1925 – 1,534,676: George Edward Andrew of Northwood, England - Manufacture of Tape Cord, Yarn, Rope, Fabric, or Other Material Produced from Fibers
Patented March 24, 1931 – 1,797,249: Reginald Truesdale, Robert Smith, and Edward Simpson, of Erdington, Birmingham, England, Assignors to the Dunlop Rubber Company, Limited, of Fort Dunlop, England, a Corporation of Great Britain – Apparatus for the Manufacture of Cords or Strings
Patented December 29, 1931 – 1,839,168: Gerhard Karl Emil Heinrich Stampe, of Luebeck, Germany, Assignor to Otto Heinrich Drager, of Luebeck, Germany – Fabric for Gas Protection Mask or the Like and Method for Producing Same
Patented February 13, 1934 – 1,947,024: Edgar A. Slage, Cranford, N.J., Assignor to American Smelting and Refining Company, New York, N.Y., a Corporation of New Jersey – Chemical Treatment of Fabrics
Patented June 26, 1934 – 1,964,658: Jean Etienne Charles Bongrand, Paris, and Leon Sylvain Max Lejeune, Wasquehal, France – Manufacture of Threads of Textile Material
Patented September 4, 1934: George W. Danielson, Fall River, Mass., Assignor to the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company, Akron, Ohio – Strand Coating Device
Patented September 25, 1934: Juan Duarry-Serra, Barcelona, Spain – Process for Impregnating Textile Products with Latex under Great Hydraulic Pressures
Patented January 8, 1935: Ralph M. Reel, Newark, Ohio, Assignor to the Pharis Tire and Rubber Company, Newark, Ohio – Pneumatic Tire Construction
Patented February, 26, 1935: Eardley Hazell, New York, N.Y., Assignor, by Mesne Assignments, to United States Rubber Company – Rubber-Fabric Material
Patented June 18, 1935: Philip Schidrowitz, London, England, Assignor by Mesne Assignments, to Filastic Holding S.A., Binningen, near Basel, Switzerland – Impregnation of Textile Materials
Patented December 29, 1936 – Improvement in the Treatment of Fabrics for the Production of Non-Crease Effects
Patented December 31, 1935: George Henry Rhodes, Fall River, Mass. – Process of Treating Textile Fabrics
Patented March 31, 1936: Ralph W. Brown, Belleville III, Assignor to Aluminum Company of America, Pittsburgh, Pa. – Treatment of Fabrics
Patented August 4, 1936: Lorin B. Sebrell, Silver Lake, Ohio, Assignor to Wingfoot Corporation, Wilmington, Delaware – Prevention of Deterioration of Cotton Cord by Heat
Patented August 4, 1936: Lorin B. Sebrell, Silver Lake, Ohio, Assignor to Wingfoot Corporation, Wilmington, Delaware – Prevention of Deterioration of Cotton Cord by Heat
Patented may 31, 1938: Dalton B. Faloon, Beacon, and Roland M. Whittaker, New York, N.Y., Assignors to Hammond Paint & Chemical Co. – Process for Protecting Material Employing Pestproofing media and Material so protected (2 Copies)
Patented August 23, 1938: Joseph Brandwood, Southport, England – Process for Treatment of Textile Materials
Patented December 31, 1938: Samuel C. Horning, Newark, N.J., Assignor to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Willmongton, Delaware – Lead Chromate Pigments and Process for Producing the Same
Patented August 30, 1938: William Hale Charch, Buffalo, N.Y., and Dorothy Bateman Maney, Old Hickory, Tenn., Assignors by Mesne Assignments, to E.I. du Pont Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Treatment of Cellulosic Materials and Products Resulting There From
Patented November 22, 1938: Eugene C. Gwaltney, Macon, Georgia, Assignor to Bibb Manufacturing Company, Macon, GA – Process of Manufacturing Rubber Impregnated Fabric and the Product Thereof
Patented February 14, 1939: Samuel Katzoff, Hampton, Va., and Reuben Roseman, Baltimore, Md. – Solution of Titanic Hydroxide in Hydrogen Peroxide
Patented March 12, 1940: Otto Kress and Charles E. Johnson, Appleton, Wis., Assignors to the Institute of Paper Chemistry, Appleton, Wis. – Proteinized Hosiery
Patented March 25, 1941: Fernand Frederic Schwartz, Paris, France, Assignor, by Direct and Mesne Assignments, to American Ecla Corporation, Dover, Delaware – Waterproofing of Textile Material
Patented June 18, 1940: Samuel Lenher and Luther B. Arnold, Jr., Wilmington, Del., Assignors to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Softening of Textile Materials and Compositions Thereof
Patented August 20, 1940: Arthur P. Tanberg, Wilmington, Del., Assignor, by Mesne Assignments, to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Artificial Cellulosic material Bonded to rubber and Method of Producing the Bond
Patented August 20, 1940: Frederick M. Meigs, Wilmington, Del., Assignor by Mesne Assignments, to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Artificial Cellulosic Material Bonded to Rubber and Method of Producing the Bond
Patented August 20, 1940: Dorothy Bateman Maney, Old Hickory, Tenn., Assignor, by Mesne Assignments, to E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Artificial Cellulosic Material Bonded to Rubber and Method of Producing the Bond
Patented August 20, 1940: Albert Hershberger, Kenmore, N.Y., Assignor, by Mesne Assignments, to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Artificial Cellulosic Material Bonded to Rubber and Method of Producing the Bond
Patented August 20, 1940: Albert Hershberger, Kenmore, N.Y., Assignor, by Mesne Assignments, to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Artificial Cellulosic Material Bonded to Rubber and Method of Producing the Bond – Also:
Patented Aug. 20, 1040 # 2,211 949, # 2,211,948, 2,211, 945 Patented August 20, 1940: Emmette F. Izard, Kenmore, N.Y., Assignor to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Cellulosic Product and Process for Preparing Same
Patented August 30, 1938: William Hale Charch, Buffalo, N.Y., and Dorothy Bateman Maney, Old Hickory, Tenn., Assignors, by Mesne Assignments, to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Treatment of Cellulosic Materials and Products Resulting Therefrom
Patented October 8, 1940: Peter M. Strang, Auburndale, and Austin S. Norcross, Newton, Mass., Assignors, by Mesne Assignments, to Peter M. Strang – Method of and Apparatus for Testing Fibrous Textile Materials
Patented October 8, 1940: Herald M. Ruch, Los Angeles, California – Tire Cord Demonstration Device
Patented October 15, 1940: Clifford J.B. Thor, Chicago, Ill., Assignor to the Visking Corporation, Chicago, Ill. – Process for Producing Articles of Regenerated Chitin and the Resulting Articles
Patented October 15, 1940: Henry Dreyfus, London, England – Manufacture of Esters
Patented October 15, 1940: Jack J. Gordon, Kingsport, Tenn., Assignor to Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y. – Polyvinyl Acetal Resin Compositions Containing the Butyl Ether of Diethylene Glycol Benzoate
Patented December 10, 1940: Albert Hershberger, Buffalo, N.Y., Assignor to E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware – Artificial Cellulosic Material Bonded to Rubber and Method of Producing the Bond, Also: # 2,224,679
Patented December 10, 1940: Meindert Danius Rozenbrock, Delden, Twenthe Overijsel, Netherlands – Process of Improving Fibrous Materials
Patented December 17, 1940: William H. Elliot, Akron, Ohio, Assignor to the B.F. Goodrich Company, New York, N.Y. – Tire
Dates
- Other: 1874, 1917, 1927, 1931, 1934-1936, 1938-39,1940
Extent
From the Collection: 128 Linear Feet : 100 boxes
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Repository Details
Part of the Columbus State University Archives and Special Collections Repository
4225 University Ave
Columbus Georgia 31907 United States