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1838 Humphries's Patent Model of a Carpet

American History Museum

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Object Details

inventor

Humphries, John

Description

Carpet Patent Model
Patent No. 1,028, issued December 10, 1838
John Humphries of New York, New York
Humphries’s innovation was the addition of a supplementary layer to the bottom of a carpet to provide an extra cushion and to strengthen the overall structure. The added stuffer weft is a stout, loosely twisted cord, woven into the underside of the carpet and interlaced with the ground warp. These samples of carpeting are important because they are the earliest known examples of patented carpeting in the United States.
Whether this patent was utilized is unknown but there is evidence of Humphries being involved in the manufacture of carpeting. The Journal of the Franklin Institute lists premiums awarded at their eighth exhibition in 1833. John Humphries was presented a premium for four pieces of Brussels carpeting. The judges noted that “these goods are of excellent quality and style, and satisfactory assurances have been received that they are exclusively of American workmanship throughout all the processes from the raw material to the finished product of the loom.”

Location

Currently not on view

model constructed

before 1838-12-10

patent date

1838-12-10

ID Number

TE.T18362

catalog number

T18362.000

patent number

001028

accession number

1978.2402

Object Name

carpet patent model

Object Type

Patent Model

Physical Description

fiber (overall material)
woven (overall production method/technique)

Related Publication

Janssen, Barbara Suit. Patent Models Index

See more items in

Home and Community Life: Textiles
Patent Models, Textile Machinery
Textiles
Patent Models

Data Source

National Museum of American History

classified

Patent Models
Invention

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a4-39a7-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_622769

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