........................ Clips!!
by Mary Bellis
The
fastening of papers has been historical referenced to as early as the
13th century, when people put ribbon through parallel incisions in the
upper left hand corner of pages. Later people started to wax the ribbons
to make them stronger and easier to undo and redo. This was the way
people clipped papers together for the next six hundred years.
In 1835, a New York physician
named John Ireland Howe invented a machine for mass producing straight
pins. Straight pins then became a popular way to fasten papers together,
although they were not originally designed for that purpose. Straight
pins were designed to be used in sewing and tailoring, to temporally
fasten cloth together.
Johan
Vaaler, a Norwegian inventor with a degree in electronics, science and
mathematics, invented the paperclip in 1899. He received a patent for
his design from Germany in 1899, since Norway had no patent laws at that
time. Johan Vaaler was an employee at a local invention office when he
invented the paperclip. He received an American patent in 1901 -- patent
abstract "It consists of forming same of a spring material, such as a
piece of wire, that is bent to a rectangular, triangular, or otherwise
shaped hoop, the end parts of which wire piece form members or tongues
lying side by side in contrary directions." Johan Vaaler was the first
person to patent a paperclip design, although other unpatented designs
might have existed first.
American inventor, Cornelius
J. Brosnan filed for an American patent for a paperclip in 1900. He
called his invention the "Konaclip".
But
it was a company called the Gem Manufacturing Ltd. of England who first
designed the double oval shaped standard looking paperclip. This
familiar and famous paperclip, was and still is referred to as the "Gem"
clip. William Middlebrook, of Waterbury, Connecticut, patented a
machine for making paper clips of the Gem design in 1899. The Gem
paperclip was never patented.
People have been re-inventing
the paperclip over and over again. The designs that have been the most
successful are the "Gem" with it's double oval shape, the "Non-Skid"
which held in place well, the "Ideal" used for thick wads of paper, and
the "Owl" the paperclip that did not get tangled up with other
paperclips.
note: During World War
II, Norwegians were prohibited from wearing any buttons with the
likeness or initials of their king on them. In protest they started
wearing paperclips, because paperclips were a Norwegian invention whose
original function was to bind together. This was a protest against the
Nazi occupation and wearing a paperclip could have gotten you arrested.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
And who hasn't been bored silly at least once at the office and made one of these:

No comments :
Post a Comment