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Charles Goodyear: The inventor who died poor

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Charles Goodyear: The inventor who died poor
Charles Goodyear - Bizna

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Charles Goodyear

This is the inspirational story of a man who chose to be an inventor withou any knowledge of chemistry and staked it out for three decaded. Goodyear is the inventor of vulcanized rubber – a key industrial substance. Despite his commitment to invention, his experiments with rubber continually failed, Goodyear reduced his family to poverty, was jailed for debt and derided by society as a mad man. Years after his death, when the age of automobiles dawned, two brothers from Ohio decided to name their company after the man who made their product possible – hence Goodyear tires were born.

Hardware Merchant

Charles Goodyear and his family suffered through years of failure and poverty before he succeeded in making rubber viable as an industrial material. Born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1800, Goodyear decided to become an inventor at the age of 33, after his family’s hardware store went under in a national financial crisis. An obsessive man drawn to the Book of Job, Goodyear would endure his own tribulations over the next decade.

The Trouble With Rubber

In the early years of the Industrial Revolution, natural rubber seemed like a wonder substance. In its original form, it was a thick sap that was drained from trees in tropics like Brazil. Coagulated with acid, it became malleable enough to shape and form. His experiments were geared toward making rubber stable enough that it would be reliable in industrial settings. No matter what he tried, though, summertime heat destroyed the rubber, turning it into a mass of sticky, smelly gum.

Vulcanizing

It was not until 1841, after much hardship and time spent in jail for debt, that he landed on a solution. He found that by uniformly heating sulfur- and lead-fortified rubber at a relatively low temperature, he could render the substance melt-proof and reliable. He patented his process in June 1844, licensed it to manufacturers, and showcased it at exhibitions. Vulcanized rubber could be used to manufacture shoes, waterproof clothing, life jackets, balls, hats, umbrellas, rafts… and one day, it would be an important component in tires, roofs, floors, transmission belts, assembly lines, shock absorbers, seals and gaskets.

The Goodyear Name

Following his success, he fought to protect his process from competitors and endured patent battles. He died in 1860, on the eve of the Civil War. His son would sell the Goodyear name in 1865, the year the patent expired. Several decades later, an Akron tire manufacturer named his own company Goodyear Tire and Rubber, in honor of the inventor.

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