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Thaddeus Fairbanks

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Thaddeus Fairbanks
Thaddeus Fairbanks c. 1880.jpg
Fairbanks, circa 1880
Born(1796-01-16)January 16, 1796
DiedApril 12, 1886(1886-04-12) (aged 90)
Resting placeMount Pleasant Cemetery, St. Johnsbury, Vermont
NationalityAmerican
OccupationInventor
Businessman
EmployerE. & T. Fairbanks
Known forFairbanks Scales
Spouse(s)Lucy Peck Barker (m. 1820-1866, her death)
Children2
RelativesErastus Fairbanks (brother)
Ephraim Paddock (uncle)
Horace Fairbanks (nephew)
Franklin Fairbanks (nephew)
Fairbanks scale and log table - Bureau of Mines Weigh Station, Boulder City, Nevada
Fairbanks platform and table scales

Thaddeus Fairbanks (January 17, 1796 – April 12, 1886) was an American businessman, mechanic, and engineer. He invented furnaces, cooking stoves, cast iron steel plows, and other metal items related to farming. He designed and manufactured platform scales called the Fairbanks scale that allowed the accurate weighing of large objects. This technology came about because of his processing large quantities of hemp in his store management. His successful scales were sold extensively worldwide and he received honors and awards from world leaders for the technology he developed. He was a co-founder with his brother of St. Johnsbury Academy, a school for children.

Biography[]

Fairbanks was born in the town of Brimfield, Massachusetts, on January 16, 1796.[1] He was the elders of three sons of Joseph Fairbanks and his wife Phebe (née Paddock) Fairbanks. He was educated in the schools of Brimfield working on the family farm in his spare time and showed a natural inclination toward mechanics.[2][3] In 1815, he moved with his family to St. Johnsbury, Vermont, from the old Fairbanks' homestead in Dedham, Massachusetts. This oldest surviving timber-frame house in North America was originally started in construction around 1636 by Jonathan Fairbanks, who emigrated from Summerby on the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, in 1633.[4]

Fairbanks made a woodworking shop above his father's sawmill and gristmill, which were powered by the Sleepers River stream flow water falls.[5][6] There he made pleasure carriages alone until 1824.[7] He then constructed an iron foundry with his brother Erastus—who later became Governor of Vermont—joining him in the establishment of the new business partnership E. & T. Fairbanks to make furnaces for heating, cooking stoves, cast iron plows, and farm implements.[8] In 1826, Fairbanks was granted a patent on a refrigerator and a cast-iron plow that was extensively used.[9] He was the mechanical technician behind the designs of the inventions of the company and his brother was the businessman that marketed the products.[10]

In 1830, Fairbanks and Erastus took up an interest in processing hemp as a product to sell. Fairbanks, being mechanically minded, made and patented a hemp-and-flax-dressing machine at this time called a Haynes machine.[1][11] He became the general manager of Saint Johnsbury Hemp Company that was in a new building 25 feet by 60 feet with 1500 square feet of floor space.[6][12] There he built mechanical scales that would accurately weigh large loads of hemp straw that came from farmers. There was no accurate measuring scales for this important task at the time, so no way of knowing exactly what to pay the farmer with the going rate of $15 (equivalent to $432 in 2020) a ton.[13] The designed scale for weighing heavy loads was placed in a dug out pit with the platform that the object being weighed sat on being at ground level and then wagon loads of hemp could be driven onto it with a team of horses.[14][15]

The scale consisted of two A shaped levers and four straight levers meeting at a steel rod. Fairbanks determined that by hanging from the one that hung upon the steel rod, he could put together four supports for his platform, from all of which the leverage related to the steel beam was balanced on bearings. This mechanical innovation was the birth of the modern platform scale.[16] He was then granted a patent on the platform scale, which became known as the Fairbanks scale. Upon building these scales that turned out to be popular, his brothers advised him to produce and sell these as town scales.[17] He was given the title "Father of Modern Weighing" for the technology.[18]

Fairbanks had his scales displayed at ten international expositions including those of London, Paris, Vienna, Philadelphia, Chicago, Buffalo and St. Louis. The chief honor was awarded to the United States at the 1873 Vienna World's Fair for the Fairbanks technology.[6] He received many foreign awards and was knighted and received the Imperial Order of Franz Joseph award from the Emperor of Austria. He also received from the King of Siam a golden medal and decoration of a Puspamala award and from the Bey of Tunis medals and honors. Even though he shunned away from the spotlight of honors he was always known as Sir Thaddeus.[5]

The platform scale for accurately weighing heavy objects became Fairbanks' most famous invention; it is commonly known to the public as the Fairbanks Scale, for which he patented a design in 1831.[19] Before its invention, accurately weighing of particularly heavy objects required hanging them from a log beams; as a result, these heavy and awkward objects could not be precisely weighed with any reasonable degree of accuracy. A platform scale, built large enough, could weigh an entire loaded wagon. By placing a fully loaded wagon on the platform scale for weight measurement, removing the load, and then bringing it back onto the platform scale when empty, it became possible to accurately calculate the weight of just the load and then determine the value of the farm products of the load.[3]

In 1834, Fairbanks with his brothers Erastus and Joseph formed an enterprise of E. & T. Fairbanks Company to make and market these platform scales. The unique scales became popular all throughout the United States and its popularity spread worldwide to South America, Europe, Asia, and Russia.[20] The exported units used figures of the country (i.e. Chinese characters) and the metric system for the measurements.[12] The company at first slowly increased in production and doubled in volume every three years from 1842 to 1857. There was a temporary slowdown in business from 1857 to 1860.[21] In 1860 business picked up again and the enterprise increased considerably from year to year when they received orders from foreign countries.[22] In 1874, the business partnership incorporated into Fairbanks Scale Company and sold on a large scale.[23] By 1885 the home factory of a thousand men was manufacturing 70,000 scales a year and other factories were in Asia, Africa, Russia, Holland, Cuba, Siam, and Japan.[22]

The platform scale revolutionized the weighing of large loads and has been in use since its inception. Platform scales are found in many hardware stores, doctor's office, and factories in the United States. Fairbanks scales were used as farm scales that could be set up on top of the ground or barn floor, scales for weighing small cargo cars at coal mines, platform scales for weighing up to 250-ton freight cars, scales for weighing cotton, meat weighting scales with grinding attachments, warehouse scales in many varieties, scales of non-corrosive material impervious to salts for use to fish dealers, 5-ton scales for weighing minerals at mines, heavy duty scales with racks to weigh bars of iron in rolling mills, railroad track scales with capacity of 335,000 pounds, automatic sacking scales for the grain trade, scales for weighing milk containers at creameries, scales for fine weighing from a feather or a phonograph needle to 10 pounds as required by merchants, photographers, druggists, cloth sellers, and postal workers.[24] Fairbanks was granted the first railroad-track platform scale patent on January 13, 1857, and received number 16,381. In 1916, the E. & T. Fairbanks Company was taken over by Fairbanks, Morse & Company. Ownership of the company has since changed hands several times but Fairbanks platform scales are still made in Saint Johnsbury, Vermont.[25]

Personal life[]

Fairbanks in 1820 married Lucy Peck Barker (1798-1866). They had five children, two lived to adulthood. His daughter Charlotte, wife of Reverend George N. Webber, died in 1869. His son Professor Henry Fairbanks cared for Fairbanks in his last years of life and survived him.[6] He received over forty patents in his lifetime,[5] the 43rd one being his last one was granted to him at the age 90. On March 31, 1886, Fairbanks made a misstep in his house and fell. He broke his hip and it never healed properly. He died April 12 and was buried at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in St. Johnsbury.[26][27]

St Johnsbury Academy, Colby Hall

Fairbanks was involved in numerous charitable and civic endeavors, including the 1842 founding with his brothers Erastus and Joseph of the St. Johnsbury Academy for St. Johnsbury children and children of nearby towns. He originally paid $50,000 (equivalent to $1,496,000 in 2020) to have it constructed. It is a red brick building of Norman-Gothic Tudor style. He added the South Hall a year later at a cost of $36,000 (equivalent to $1,077,000 in 2020). In 1872 Fairbanks erected larger convenient modern-day structures of brick with gifts to the institution of some $200,000 (equivalent to $4,321,000 in 2020). He expanded the curriculum and in 1873 the academy was reincorporated as a school of grades 9-12 for all boys and girls in the county to receive high quality educational opportunities as was intended by the founders.[28]

St. Johnsbury Academy is a school for both technical training and college preparatory studies, making it unique among New England academies. The academy ranked first in Vermont and one of the best in the New England states having thirteen instructors, three hundred pupils, and an endowment from E & T Fairbanks Company of $100,000 (equivalent to $2,160,000 in 2020). It had the first free public library in the state of Vermont. A painting of Fairbanks is in the lobby of Colby Hall.[5]

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 130.
  2. ^ "Death of Thaddeus Fairbanks". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. April 12, 1886. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  3. ^ a b "Mechanical Skill, Ingenuity of Thaddeus Fairbanks made possible the first nearly perfect scale". The Caledonian-Record. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. May 18, 1955. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  4. ^ "An Hundred Years of Fairbanks Scales". The Caledonian-Record. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. June 27, 1930. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  5. ^ a b c d Duffy 2003, p. 119.
  6. ^ a b c d "Death of Sir Thaddeus Fairbanks". The St. Johnsbury Caledonian. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. April 15, 1886. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  7. ^ Fairbanks 1914, p. 151.
  8. ^ "Vermont Historical Society Library — Fairbanks Papers, 1815–1889, Doc 1–5, Doc 95". Archived from the original on 2008-01-08. Retrieved 2008-11-07.
  9. ^ "Thaddeus Fairbanks". Buffalo Evening News. Buffalo, New York. February 1, 1886. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  10. ^ "Off the Beaten Path". The Dispatch. Moline, Illinois. April 22, 1949. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  11. ^ Arthur F. Stone (March 8, 1943). "St. Johnsbury Academy, The First One Hundred years / Thaddeus Fairbanks, The Inventor". The Caledonian-Record. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  12. ^ a b "Platform Scale is Hundred Years old". The Gazellt. Montreal, Canada. April 22, 1930. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  13. ^ "Thaddeus Fairbanks". The Bozeman Weekly Chronicle. Bozeman, Montana. June 30, 1886. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  14. ^ "Fairbanks, Morse & Co., One of the Great Industrial Pioneers of America". Freeport Journal-Standard. Freeport, Illinois. August 27, 1958. p. 26 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  15. ^ "The Fairbanks Scale / History of Thaddeus Fairbanks and the Platform Scale". The Vermont Advance. Burlington, Vermont. April 1, 1916. p. 7 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  16. ^ J.H. Walbridge (September 9, 1896). "Summerville! / Something Interesting about a Thriving Section of St. Johnsbury". St. Johnsbury Republican. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. p. 9 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  17. ^ Ullery 1894, pp. 129–133.
  18. ^ "Former President Coolidge to attend Celebration of Fairbanks Company in July". St. Johnsbury Republican. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. May 12, 1930. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  19. ^ "A daily lesson in History". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 28, 1908. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  20. ^ "Two Interesting views showing Birthplace of Fairbanks Scale and large expansion in plant". The Caledonian-Record. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. June 27, 1930. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  21. ^ "Fairbanks's Scale Works". St Johnsbury Caledonian. St Johnsbury, Vermont. June 12, 1868. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  22. ^ a b "Fairbanks, Morse & Co". The Saint Paul Globe. Saint Paul, Minnesota. December 25, 1885. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  23. ^ Ingham 1983, p. 360.
  24. ^ "Thousands visit scale exhibit in Armory and marvel and admire at what they saw". St Johnsbury Republican. St Johnsbury, Vermont. July 7, 1930. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  25. ^ Moody 1923, p. 1761.
  26. ^ Ingham 1983, p. 361.
  27. ^ "Thaddeus Fairbanks". The Fall River Daily Herald. Fall River, Massachusetts. April 27, 1886. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  28. ^ "Our History". stjacademy.org. St. Johnsbury, VT: St. Johnsbury Academy. Retrieved April 5, 2018.

Sources[]

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