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Jan Eamst Matzeliger, shoe machinist and inventor, is born.
1852 (Sep 15)
Jan Earnst Matzeliger was born in Paramaribo, Suriname, to a Holland-born engineer and a native Black American mother. He began to apprentice at his father's machine shops when he was ten, an experience that would shape his future in machinery and mechanics. In 1871, he boarded an East Indian vessel to work as a sailor. He settled in Philadelphia two years later and by 1876 had made his home in Lynn, Massachusetts, where he found work in a shoe factory. After years of observing the production of shoes, Matzeliger began working on his own machine, a mechanical Laster for the manufacture of shoes. On March 20, 1883, he was granted a patent for the "lasting machine." It proved to be a great success, turning out 100 to 600 more pairs of shoes a day than could be produced using the manual method. Unfortunately, Matzeliger did not live to enjoy the financial rewards nor to see his invention's impact on shoe manufacture. He died of tuberculosis less than a month before his thirty-seventh birthday in 1889.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.