Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made by Jr. James D. McCabe
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page 20 of 631 (03%)
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Island--Removes to Boston--Delusive prosperity--The mail bag
contract--His friends urge him to abandon his efforts--He refuses--On the verge of success--Discovers the usefulness of sulphur--The inventor's hope--The revelation--Discovers the secret of vulcanization--Down in the depths--Kept back by poverty--A beggar--A test of his honesty--Starvation at hand--The timely loan--Removal to New York--Difficulties in the way--Death of his youngest child--Finds friends in New York--His experiments in vulcanization--Final success--His heart in his work--Fails to secure patents in Europe--His losses from dishonest rivals--Declaration of the Commissioner of Patents--Death of Mr. Goodyear--Congress refuses to extend his patent--His true reward. CHAPTER XV. ELI WHITNEY. The home of General Greene in Georgia--The soldier's widow--An arrival from New England--The young schoolmaster--A mechanical genius--Early history of Whitney--Mrs. Greene's invitation--Visit of the planters--State of the cotton culture in 1792--A despondent planter--Mrs. Greene advises them to try Whitney--Origin of the cotton gin--Whitney's first efforts--His workshop--The secret labors--How he provided himself with materials--Finds a partner--Betrayal of his secret--He is robbed of his model--He recovers it and completes it--The first cotton gin--Statement of the revolution produced by the invention in the cotton culture of the South--Opinion of Judge Johnson--The story of an inventor's wrongs--Whitney is cheated and robbed of his rights--The worthlessness of a patent--A long and disheartening |
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