Andre-Marie Ampere
Michael Faraday
Friedrich Koepe
Georg Ohm
Elisha Otis
Frank A. Perret
Jesse Reno
The Siemens Brothers
Frank J. Sprague
Nikola Tesla
Otis Tufts
Alessandro Volta
James Watt
Historic Prints
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The question is often asked of
those within the elevator industry, "When and where was the elevator invented
and by whom?" This would elicit the same response if the question concerned
the birth of the ship, automobile, locomotive or aircraft. All such complex
machines are the brainchildren of countless innovators, reaching back
to the individual who first extracted metal from ore; learned to combine
two or more components to make a more useful mechanism; or in later centuries,
shouted "Eureka!" as the idea of giving a steam engine rotary motion was
conceived. Many entrepreneurs are hidden in the mists of time -- the first
man to consider lifting material or a person in a basket, net or bucket;
he who replaced the hook on the end of a rope with a platform, thought
of rails guiding a platform or conceived how to terminate ropes or cables
securely. Other innovators are not lost to the record in the elevator
museum -- he who made the first leather cup serving to contain water pressure
within a cylinder; or observed an auto service lift shortly before World
War II and envisioned a column of oil lifting loads and passengers. In
early times, inventors patented their innovations, being named as the creator
of the mechanism or process. Later, engineers assigned their inventions
to the employer as a part of the initial hiring contract. Often the creativity
of such individuals is blurred and should be resurrected. On the other
hand, modern-age inventions were frequently spawned by teams of technicians.
Throughout this museum, copy cards attempt to give credit where it is due
and a Time Line consolidation also serves to pinpoint the "who," "when"
and "where" of ongoing innovation. Periodically, as with the "first traction
elevator installation," several companies claim the honor. However, obvious
improvements sometimes take place in different parts of the world, almost
simultaneously. This is an opportune time to set the record straight, and
we encourage historians to convey specific knowledge of innovators. The
information will be placed "online" -- practically the same as being
"set in concrete"!
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