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Patent Model, Life Boat

American History Museum

Patent model, lifeboat, #2018, patented by Joseph Francis
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  • Patent model, lifeboat, #2018, patented by Joseph Francis
  • Patent model, lifeboat, #2018, patented by Joseph Francis
  • Patent model, lifeboat, #2018, patented by Joseph Francis
  • Patent model, lifeboat, #2018, patented by Joseph Francis

    Object Details

    patentee

    Francis, Joseph

    inventor

    Francis, Joseph

    Description

    Joseph Francis of New York (1801–93) made a name for himself in the 1840s and 1850s manufacturing light and sturdy corrugated-iron lifeboats and other nautical gear. This 1841 patent model shows his design for a wood or metal boat fitted with airtight copper tanks. These tanks were to be charged with gas or air to provide buoyancy and, in an emergency, would work in conjunction with several holes through the bottom of the boat. When the boat started taking on water in rough seas, the holes would be opened. That action, combined with the buoyancy of the tanks, would permit drainage.
    The well-known inventors of mid-19th-century America—Elias Howe, Cyrus McCormick, and Samuel F. B. Morse—were celebrated as national benefactors. Aspiring inventors regarded applying for a patent not just as a key step on the road to potential wealth, but as a patriotic duty—a contribution to the country’s betterment and future. Solidly within this style, Joseph Francis confidently called his buoyant boat the “great American life boat.” He declared with pride that “the model and application of the buoyant power which I now claim . . . is the best and safest for life boats and all other boats and vessels . . . it is different from and an improvement on all former invention by me and any other person . . . .”
    In fact, the 1841 patent represented by this model is but a minor alteration to his first patent, an 1839 design for a double-bottomed boat fitted with buoyant air cylinders. His second attempt simply added additional tanks to the boat’s ends and flattened the bottom of the hull to enable it “to sit upright when left by a retiring surge upon a rock bar or beach, where other modeled boats would be upset.”

    Date made

    1841

    patent date

    1841-03-26

    ID Number

    TR.308542

    catalog number

    308542

    accession number

    89797

    patent number

    2,018

    Object Name

    patent model, lifeboat
    life boat, patent model

    Object Type

    Patent Model

    Other Terms

    patent model, lifeboat; lifeboat; Maritime

    Physical Description

    wood (overall material)
    paint (surface material)
    copper alloy (parts material)
    ferrous (parts material)

    Measurements

    overall: 4 1/4 in x 6 in x 26 1/2 in; 10.795 cm x 15.24 cm x 67.31 cm

    associated place

    United States: New York, New York City

    Related Publication

    National Museum of American History. On the Water exhibition website

    Related Web Publication

    http://americanhistory.si.edu/onthewater

    See more items in

    Work and Industry: Maritime
    Engineering, Building, and Architecture
    Transportation
    On the Water exhibit

    Exhibition

    On the Water

    Exhibition Location

    National Museum of American History

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    related event

    Expansion and Reform

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746b2-feec-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_843790

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