Richard Jordan Gatling
Richard Jordan Gatling | |
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Born |
September 12, 1818 Hertford County, North Carolina |
Died |
February 26, 1903 84) New York City, New York | (aged
Known for | Gatling gun |
Signature |
Richard Jordan Gatling (September 12, 1818 – February 26, 1903) was an American inventor best known for his invention of the Gatling gun, the first successful machine gun.
Life
Gatling was born in Hertford County, North Carolina. In 1818 at the age of 21, Gatling created a screw propeller for steamboats, without realizing that one had been patented just months prior by John Ericsson.[1][2] While living in North Carolina, he worked in the county clerk’s office, taught school briefly, and became a merchant. At the age of 36, Gatling moved to St. Louis, Missouri where he worked in a dry goods store and invented a rice-sowing machine and a wheat drill (machines to aid in planting rice and wheat, respectively).[3] The introduction of these machines did much to revolutionize the agricultural system in the country.[4] After an attack of smallpox, Gatling became interested in medicine. He graduated from the in 1850 with an MD. Although he had his MD, he never practiced; he was more interested in a career as an inventor.[1][4] At the outbreak of the Civil War, Gatling was living in Indianapolis, Indiana. There he devoted himself to the perfection of firearms. In 1861, the same year the war started, he invented the Gatling gun.[1] A year later, he founded the Gatling Gun Company.
By the early 1850s, Gatling was successful enough in business to offer marriage to Jemima Sanders, 19 years younger than Gatling and the daughter of a prominent Indianapolis physician.[5] They married on October 25, 1854. Her younger sister Zerelda was married to David Wallace, the governor of Indiana. An active member of his Masonic Lodge, he was member of Center Lodge No. 23.[6][7]
Later in his life, Gatling patented inventions to improve toilets, bicycles, steam-cleaning of raw wool, pneumatic power, and many other fields. He was elected as the first president of the American Association of Inventors and Manufacturers in 1891, serving for six years. Although still quite wealthy at the time of his death, he made and lost several fortunes by his investments.
In his final years, Gatling moved back to St. Louis, Missouri, to form a new company for manufacturing his steam plows, or tractors. While in New York City to visit his daughter and to talk with his patent agency, Gatling died at his daughter's home on February 26, 1903.[8] He is interred at the Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis, Indiana.[9]
His contributions were commemorated by the U.S. Navy during WWII when the Fletcher Class Destroyer DD-671 was christened the USS Gatling.
Inventions
While being most known for inventing the Gatling gun, Gatling invented and patented a number of other inventions. His inventions include a screw propeller and a wheat drill (a planting device) in 1839, a hemp break machine in 1850, a steam plow (steam tractor) in 1857, the Gatling gun in 1861, a marine steam ram in 1862, and a motor-driven plow (tractor).[3]
Gatling gun
Gatling invented the Gatling gun after he noticed that a majority of the soldiers fighting in the Civil War were lost to disease rather than gunshots. In 1877, he wrote:
- It occurred to me that if I could invent a machine – a gun – which could by its rapidity of fire, enable one man to do as much battle duty as a hundred, that it would, to a large extent supersede the necessity of large armies, and consequently, exposure to battle and disease [would] be greatly diminished.[10]
The gun was based on Gatling’s seed planter.[11] A working prototype was developed in 1861. In 1862, he founded the Gatling Gun Company in Indianapolis, Indiana to market the gun. The first six production guns were destroyed during a fire in December 1862 at the factory. All six of them had been manufactured at Gatling's expense. Undaunted, Gatling arranged for another 13 to be manufactured at the Cincinnati Type Factory.
Though the gun was developed during the Civil War, it saw very little action. This is partly because Gatling was accused of being a copperhead because of his North Carolina roots, but this was never proven.[12] Gatling was never affiliated with the Confederate States government or military, nor did he live in the South during the Civil War.[5] Although General Benjamin F. Butler bought 12 and Admiral David Dixon Porter bought one,[13] it wasn't until 1866 that the US Government officially purchased Gatling guns.[14] In 1870 he sold his patents for the Gatling gun to Colt.[15] Gatling remained president of the Gatling Gun Company until it was fully absorbed by Colt in 1897. In 1893, Gatling patented a Gatling gun that replaced the hand cranked mechanism with an electric motor, a relatively new invention at the time, achieving a rate of fire of 3,000 rounds per minute.[16]
The hand-cranked Gatling gun was declared obsolete by the United States Army in 1911. Decades later, after World War II, the mechanical concept was resurrected and wedded to electricity-driven cranking in the M61 Vulcan. That cannon has given rise to numerous variations scaled up to as high as 37 mm and down to 5.56 mm calibers offering versions that are gas-operated as well.
References
- 1 2 3 Richard Jordan Gatling (1818 - 1903) - Find A Grave Memorial
- ↑ Keller. Page 60.
- 1 2 Richard Jordan Gatling Biography
- 1 2 Richard Jordan Gatling
- 1 2 Keller. Page 134.
- ↑ A History of masonry in Indianapolis
- ↑ http://fedora.dlib.indiana.edu/fedora/get/iudl:844741/SCREEN
- ↑ Keller. Page 207.
- ↑ Keller. Page 210.
- ↑ Paul Wahl and Don Toppel, The Gatling Gun, Arco Publishing, 1971.
- ↑ Keller, Julia. Mr. Gatlings Terrible Marvel. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
- ↑ Machine Gun by Anthony Smith, 2002
- ↑ Keller.=-0 Page 163.
- ↑ Keller. Page 179.
- ↑ Keller. Page 181.
- ↑ "US Patent 502185 Gatling Gun". Retrieved February 4, 2010.
Further reading
- "Gatling, Richard Jordan". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
- Julia Keller. 2008. Mr Gatling's Terrible Marvel: The Gun That Changed Everything and the Misunderstood Genius Who Invented It. Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-01894-9
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