Thomas Davenport, inventor, was born in Williamstown, Vt., July 9, 1802; son of Daniel and Hannah (Rice) Davenport Collection Papers a descendant in direct line of the Davenport family conspicuous in the early annals of the New Haven Colony and Thomas Davenport of Dorchester, MA His father died in 1812, and in 1816 Thomas was apprenticed to a blacksmith with whom he continued until 1823. He acquired his education by committing to memory the contents of a few books as he worked at the forge. He began business for himself in Brandon, Vt., in 1823 and in 1827 he was married to Emily Goss, (pic below) a great-granddaughter of Jonathan Carver, the celebrated American traveller.
In 1833 his attention was drawn to the subject of electro-magnetism by witnessing an exhibition of the power of one of Professor Henry's electro-magnets, at the Penfield iron works, Crown Point, N.Y. He purchased the magnet and on his return home began experimenting. With his one magnet as a model he constructed a number of others, and in a few months, by laboriously working out the principle, common to every successful electric-motor, of repeated changes of magnetic poles, he succeeded in moving a wheel about seven inches in diameter at the rate of thirty revolutions per minute. He improved his invention until he produced a much larger machine which ran with great rapidity, and which he exhibited in 1835 at the Rensselaer institute in Troy, and at the Franklin institute in Philadelphia. Soon afterward he built a small circular railway, the first electric railway on record, which he exhibited in several cities.
In 1837 his invention was patented, and a company was formed in New York city for the manufacture of electro-magnetic engines and the prosecution of further experiments. By the dishonesty of an agent the company failed, and from his own slender resources he continued his experiments. In 1840 he began the publication of a paper called The ElectroMagnet, printed on a press propelled by one of his electric machines. The want of pecuniary means compelled him to suspend operations and in 1842 he returned with his family to his home in Brandon, Vt. Up to 1842 he had built over a hundred machines of different styles and construction. His only source of power was the primary battery and he had practically accomplished all that could be done, until the dynamo came into use forty years later.
Picture Thomas Davenport Marker
In the course of the eighteen years of his labors Davenport's experiments covered a wide field. He early discovered that power might be transmitted to a distance by a wire, and he sent telegraphic messages long before he had ever heard of Professor Morse, whose acquaintance he afterward made in New York. He discovered the helix principle, built some engines on that principle, and had it patented in England. After his return to Vermont he removed to a farm in Salisbury, where he began experimenting in sound as affected by the electric current. He applied the current to the strings of a piano, thus prolonging the tones at the will of the player. For this invention he had just filed his caveat in the U.S. patent office when he was stricken with his last illness. His greatest work, however, was the rotary electric motor, of which Franklin L. Pope in the Electrical Engineer (1896) said: "If this [Davenport's] patent, which expired in February, 1851, were in force today, it is not too much to say that upon a fair judicial construction of its claim, every successful motor now running would be embraced within its scope." Mr. Davenport died in Salisbury, Vt., July 6, 1851.
From: Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Johnson, Rossiter, editor
From Mr H S Davenport, nephew of Thomas Davenport
"Many of his models never left his shop and were but little known even at the time of their construction. They were only made to show to how many uses the power could be applied, and also to work from on a larger scale, if he could get pecuniary aid to do so. The different models which interested me most, at .the several times I was in his shop, were a trip-hammer, a turning lathe and a machine for doubling, twisting and reeling cotton or silk, all at the same time. A circular frame fitted with two intersecting tracks, on which four miniature cork images glided around, he called his "puppet-show." He was naturally of a retiring disposition, but when waked up was very strong in argument. His two favorite subjects were nature and electro-magnetism. He considered magnetism the most important element in the creation of the universe and thought it would be, in its destruction. Magnetism kept the heavenly bodies in their places, and if that failed everything would be turned to chaos. He could see in every rock of the earth the battery of which it was composed. So also in the animal kingdom, the bones, muscles, and blood constituted a complete battery, which exercised a repulsive or attractive force with respect to another organism of the same kind. He was a great lover of fun and exceedingly fond of a joke. On one occasion he received an order from a party in Chicago for half-a-dozen bottles of electricity. He said he knew by the tenor of the letter that it was intended as a joke, and he accordingly replied that he bottled up his wrath for such would-be ignoramuses as he was, but had no electricity for him."
This image shows about two dozen people at the Thomas Davenport Memorial tablet. There are several buildings in the background of the photograph. See HO189 - HO191 for more photos of the tablet. This a treelined street with a sidewalk. There is a car parked on the street. There is a stack of lumber in the foreground.
From The Indicator Otis
The Vermont Blacksmith Who Invented the Electric Motor
In the little hamlet of Forestdale, Vermont, sixty years ago, one Thomas Davenport made
the green hills ring with the rhythmic blows of his hammer on the anvil
as he labored as a blacksmith in the most humble circumstances. Only a
few weeks ago several of the foremost electrical men of the day.
representing the greatest electrical society in the country, and a large
number of New Englanders, gathered at the little mountain village to
honor the site of the old blacksmith shop, for it was there that Davenport began his electrical discoveries which brought about the motor as we know it today.
Thomas Davenport was born in Williamstown in 1802 and his untimely death occurred at the age of 49 years. Davenport's father died when the lad was barely ten years old and at the age of fourteen he was apprenticed to the blacksmith trade at Forestdale, three miles from Brandon, Vermont. The boy's education was very meager but one day he chanced upon a few scraps from a scientific work treating with the "galvanic magnet" of Henry, and soon after this he secured a magnet and made a battery of his own.
In one corner of the little blacksmith shop Davenport set up a bench for his little laboratory. Here he began his first experiments with electricity which were later to make his name famous throughout the world. From the first his struggles were pathetic and bitter.
Poverty stood as a gigantic barrier between him
and success, and upon one occasion it was necessary for his young wife
to sacrifice her silk wedding dress to supply insulating material for
the new motor. It was a Heavenborn flash of insight which revealed to
the young inventor the availability of
power from an electro-magnetic source; and, although he had to work
entirely with batteries, the generator being still undiscovered, his
success in this field was truly wonderful.
When Davenport came
upon the scene Faraday and Henry had already done their great work and
the principles of the electric generator and the electric motor had been
clearly perceived and enunciated. Yet there were no real motors before Davenport's time, and had the dynamo been known his work would have been carried to instant fruition. Davenport and
others much later failed because they had no ready source of cheap
power, and because the reversibility of the motor was unknown. Energy
produced by battery is at least twenty times as costly as that produced
by coal through the medium of a steam engine and dynamo. All the
electrical parts except telegraphy were held back by the absence of
cheap power. When Davenport told the
great Joseph Henry that he proposed to build his motors up to one
horsepower, the cautious philosopher warned him to "go slow," and hinted
that electricity could not compete with steam.
While a few termed the inventor a
crazy crank to try to harness lightning, he was most ably supported by
such men as Professor Turner, of Middlebury College; Mr. Ransom Cook, of
Saratoga Springs; Mr. Orange A. Smalley, of Forestdale; President
Eaton, of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; General Van Rensselaer,
of Troy; and Prof. Joseph Henry.It was in the corner of the old blacksmith shop that Davenport produced the first successful electric motor, and even before Vermont had a mile of steam railroad Davenport was
successfully operating a model electric road which ran on a circular
track, the embryo of the magnificent electric railways of today.
Broken in health and in dire poverty he returned to his native state where he died July 6th, 1851.
Living he struggled against adversity, dying he
had not a dollar to his name and for many years his very name was almost
forgotten while the entire world was enjoying the fruits of his years
of toil and study. Today this modest simple son of Vermont stands forth
as one of greatest inventors the world ever saw.—Electric News Service. Thomas Davenport Grave Pine Hill Cemetery Vermont
Frances Burchard Wadhams, daughter of William Luman and Emeline
Loretta (Cole) Wadhams, was born 2 November, 1838, in Wadhams Mills, N.
Y. She was educated at a private school in Essex, N. Y., and at the Smith and Converse Female Seminary in Burlington, Vermont. She married 2 August, 1860, George Daniel Davenport, of Salisbury, Vt. He was born in Brandon, Vt., 22 July, 1832, son of Thomas and Emily (Goss) Davenport. Picture of George Daniel Davenport Grave @ Pine Hill Cemetery Vermont
George D. Davenport was prepared for college in Brandon, Vt.. and entered Middlebury College in 1852, graduating in 1856. During his college years he spent his vacations in teaching, and continued in this vocation after graduation. He entered the service of the Government as a volunteer in the
Fifth Vermont Regiment in 1861, enlisting as Orderly Sergeant of his Company. He was soon promoted to a Lieutenancy, and then
to the Captaincy of the same Company. With his regiment, he served in
the Army of the Potomac with the Sixth Corps. In the battle of the
Wilderness, May 5, 1864, he received a wound from which he died on the
12th of the same month. He was an able officer and a brave soldier. During the Civil War, Mrs. Davenport lived in Washington, D. C., and was frequently with her husband in camp.
GEORGE DANIEL DAVENPORT, son of Thomas and Emily (Goss) Davenport. Born
in Brandon, Vt., July 22, 1832. Prepared for College in Brandon Academy.
Principal, Academy, Sherbrooke, Canada, 1857-1858. Professor in Church
School for Boys, Hamden, Conn., 1859-1860. Private, Company H, Fifth
Regiment, Vermont Volunteers, Sept. 2, 1861; First Sergeant, Sept. 16,
1861; First Lieutenant, Company G, Nov. 22, 1861; Captain, Company B,
Dec. 2, 1862-1864. Married Frances Birchard Wadhams, Aug. 2, 1860. Delta
Kappa Epsilon. — A. B.[class of 1856] Died on the field from wounds
received in the battle of the Wilderness, May 12, 1864. (from the
Catalogue of the Officers and Students of Middlebury College in
Middlebury, Vermont 1800-1915, compiled by Edgar J. Wiley, pub. by
Middlebury College, 1917)
Willard Goss Davenport (pic below) born May 9, 1843 died Oct. 14, 1919 in Detroit, Michigan married Mary C. Backus Davenport (1849 - 1931) daughter of Charles Backus and Mary Palmer Mansfield Davenport.
The Rector of Emmanuel Parish, Rev. Willard G. Davenport, fought in the Fifth Regiment of Vermont
From Vermont Historical Society
At the close of Dr. Buckham's address, the President of the Society introduced Rev. Willard G. Davenport, as follows:
At the close of Dr. Buckham's address, the President of the Society introduced Rev. Willard G. Davenport, as follows:
We are now to listen to a
sketch of the life of a Vermonter too little known to fame, though as we
shall see, he is entitled to a place in the list of the World's great
inventors. I am glad that this Society may have a part in the endeavor
to rescue his name from the comparative obscurity which outside of a
limited circle has rested upon it. He had two sons who marched to the
front in 1861, when the best young life and blood of our State was hurrying
to the front to form the living wall which guarded the Union from
disruption. One of these, Captain George Davenport of the 5th Vermont, was killed in the bloody battle of the Wilderness. The other, Lieut. W. G. Davenport, was
wounded once at Fredericksburg and again in the battle of the
Wilderness. After the close of the war he took orders in the Protestant
Episcopal Church, and is now the worthy rector of the Church of that
denomination in Anacostia, D. C. I have the honor to introduce to you Rev. Mr. Davenport. After Mr. Davenport had finished the reading of his paper, the following resolutions were offered:
Photos from Vermont Historical Society
From William B. Davenport -- Kit # 7181 Thomas of Dorchester Line
By Hon. B. F. Fifield:
Resolved, That
the Vermont Historical Society express to Matthew H. Buckham, President
of our University, its sincere appreciation of his able, scholarly and
discriminating address on the character and work of the late Edward J.
Phelps and request him to supply a copy of his address for the purpose
of its publication in the Proceedings of the Society.
By F. W. Baldwin Esq.:
Resolved, That the thanks of the Society be and hereby are given to the Rev. Willard G. Davenport for
his original and valuable contribution, not only to our local history
but also to the history of invention and of science ; and that he be
requested, with a view to its publication in the Proceedings, to supply
the Society with a copy of his paper on the work of Thomas Davenport of Brandon.
By Mr. J. C. Houghton:
Resolved: That
the President appoint a Committee of two members to secure the
necessary resolution from the Legislature, now sitting, for the
publication of the Proceedings of the Society, including the Address by
President Buckham on Edward J. Phelps and the paper by the Rev. Willard G. Davenport on Thomas Davenport of Brandon.
George William Davenport, clergyman; b. Brandon, Vt., Aug. 14, 1870; s. Willard Goss and Mary Converse (Backus) Davenport: ed.
Washington (D.C.) High Sch., St. Paul's High Sch., Baltimore, Md.;
Hobart Coll.. Geneva, N.Y.; Gen. Theol. Sem., New York: m. Brandon, Vt..
Sept. 24, 1897, Jennie Piatt Briggs. Deacon, 1893, priest, 1896,
Episcopal Ch.; in charge St. John the Baptist Ch., Baltimore, 1896;
curate St. Matthew's Ch., New York, 1896-7; rector Ch. of the
Resurrection, Richmond Hill. N.Y., 1897-1900, Ch. of the Redeemer,
Astoria, N.Y., 1900-3, St. James Ch., Danbury, Conn., since 1903;
chaplain Coast Arty., C.N.G.: mem. Sch. Bd., Danbury. Republican. Mason.
Home: Fairview Av., Danbury, Conn. From Who's who in New England: A
Biographical Dictionary of Leading Living Men and Women of the States
of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and
Connecticut
From William B. Davenport -- Kit # 7181 Thomas of Dorchester Line
Email -
7181@DavenportDNA.com
Thomas
Davenport (abt. 1615 England - 1665 MA) & Mary (abt. 1620 - 1691 MA)
Charles
Davenport (1652 MA - 1720 MA) & Waitstill Smith (1658 MA - 1747 MA)
Thomas
Davenport (1695 MA - ?) & Mary Woodward (1695 MA - ?)
Lemuel
Davenport (1739 CT - 1818 VT) & Deborah Barrows (1739 MA - ?)
Daniel
Davenport (1764 MA - 1812 VT) & Hannah Rice (1767 VT - 1844 VT)
Amos
Davenport (1793 VT - 1863 VT) & Lauretta Stockwell (1797 VT - 1885 VT)
George
Davenport (1822 VT - 1912 VT) & Eleanor Smith (1830 VT - 1907 VT)
Birge Walter
Davenport (1861 VT - 1939 MN) & Wilhelmina G. Swanson (1869 Norway - 1924 MN
5 comments:
Really interesting. Thanks for posting!
Really interesting. Thanks for posting!
Really interesting. I love learning something new everyday!
I really enjoyed this and what a raw deal he got! The hours of work and the determination put into his work! The photos were great!
Thanks
Steve Roy
Excellent, well-written and interesting article. My grandmother used to tell me about a woman driver in DC who drove an electric car which was steered by a stick. She said that the car made no noise!
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