Nelson Gavit
Nelson Gavit | |
---|---|
Born | January 25, 1810 Lebannon, Connecticut |
Died | January 24, 1876 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Occupation | American paper machinery manufacturer |
Spouse | Eliza Murray |
Nelson Gavit (25 January 1810 – 24 January 1876) was an industrial designer and manufacturer based in Philadelphia. Gavit Paper Machine Works was one of the largest American manufacturers of paper making machinery and paper mills during the nineteenth century.
Gavit was born into a family of papermakers in Lebanon, Connecticut. In 1833 he married Eliza Murray and the couple had a large family. Gavit moved to Philadelphia, the center of American publishing at the time, and began manufacturing paper making equipment in 1835.[1] His firm, Gavit Paper Machine Works, operated at the same address for nearly forty years. Gavit's work was prominent enough Brigham Young commissioned equipment for the first paper mill in the American West from Gavit.[2]
As an industrial designer, Gavit was awarded US patent 10,889 for an industrial paper-cutting machine in 1854, which allowed a web or roll of paper to be automatically cut into sheets of varying lengths. He was awarded a second patent in 1874 for an “improvement in machines for grinding rolls [i.e., rollers]”. The practical application of the latter design was to produce smooth faces on steel rollers capable of improving the surface polishing of paper during manufacture.[3]
Gavit's industrial work was awarded silver medals for paper-industry machinery at the 1874 Franklin Institute exhibition. Two years later he installed a complete paper machine at the Centennial Exhibition in 1876. The report of the awards noted that it ran “almost constant operation” through the entire exhibition.[4] Gavit’s calenders, improved deckle frame, and paper cutter were commended specifically by the judges.[5]
Gavit was active in local politics as a Republican and lent his name to pro-Union business organizations and advertising during and after the Civil War.[6] Though his key business interest remained paper machinery, in later life Gavit entered the banking and insurance business. For several years he served as vice-president of Safeguard Insurance Company of Pennsylvania. How long he remained an investor and officer of the firm is not known.[7]
Gavit died in Philadelphia and is buried in the West Laurel Hill Cemetery.
References
- ^ Freedley, Edwin T (1859). Philadelphia and Its Manufacturers. Philadelphia: Edward Young. p. 319–320.
- ^ "Deseret News". 1931-07-22.
- ^ Bishop, J. Leander (1868). A History of American Manufactures. Vol. 3v. Philadelphia: Edward Young & Co. p. 2:497.
- ^ Barker, George F. (1875). Journal of the Franklin Institute. Philadelphia: Franklin Institute.
- ^ Awards and Claims of Exhibitors at the International Exhibition, 1876. Boston: National Assoc. of Wool Manufacturers. 1877. p. 624.
- ^ "Evening Telegraph (Philadelphia, Pa.)". 1867-08-12."Evening Telegraph (Philadelphia, Pa.)". 1868-09-30.
- ^ The Chronicle: A Journal Devoted to the Interests of Insurance. 12 (2): 99. 1875.
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