The Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century. by Edward W. Byrn
CHAPTER XVII.
816 words | Chapter 63
VULCANIZED RUBBER.
EARLY USE OF CAOUTCHOUC BY THE INDIANS--COLLECTION OF THE GUM--EARLY
EXPERIMENTS FAILURES--GOODYEAR’S PERSISTENT EXPERIMENTS--NATHANIEL
HAYWARD’S APPLICATION OF SULPHUR TO THE GUM--GOODYEAR’S PROCESS OF
VULCANIZATION--INTRODUCTION OF HIS PROCESS INTO EUROPE--TRIALS AND
IMPRISONMENT FOR DEBT--RUBBER SHOE INDUSTRY--GREAT EXTENT AND
VARIETY OF APPLICATIONS--STATISTICS.
Most all important inventions have grown into existence by slow stages
of development, and by successive contributions from many minds, not a
few having descended by gradual processes of evolution from preceding
centuries. Vulcanized rubber, however, is not of this class. It belongs
exclusively to the Nineteenth Century, and owes its existence to the
tireless energy of one man. The value of the crude gum had been
previously speculated upon, and for years attempts had been made to
utilize it, but not until Goodyear invented his process of vulcanizing
it did it have any real value. This process was an important, distinct
and unique step, entirely the work of Mr. Goodyear, and it has never
been superseded nor improved upon to any extent. Charles Goodyear was
born in New Haven, December 29, 1800, and his life, beginning two days
in advance of the Nineteenth Century, furnishes an extraordinary
illustration of the struggles and trials of the inventor against adverse
fortune, and is a pathetic example of self denial, indefatigable labor,
and unrequited toil. Of feeble health, small stature, poor, and
frequently in prison for debt, he made the development of this art the
paramount object of his life, and with a pious faith and unfaltering
courage for thirty years he devoted himself to this work. Money he cared
nothing for, except in so far as it was necessary to carry on his work,
and he died July 1, 1860, poor in this world’s goods, but rich in the
consciousness of the great benefit conferred by his invention upon the
human race.
[Illustration: FIG. 160.--COLLECTING THE GUM.]
India rubber, or caoutchouc, as it is more properly called, is a
concentrated gum derived from the evaporation of the milky juice of
certain trees found in South America, Mexico, Central America and the
East Indies. The South American variety is called _Jatropha elastica_,
and the East Indian variety the _Ficus elastica_. The South American
Indians called it _cahuchu_. The province of Para, south of the equator,
in Brazil, furnishes the largest part and best quality of gum. The tree
from which the gum exudes grows to the height of eighty, and sometimes
to one hundred feet. It runs up straight for forty or fifty feet without
a branch. Its top is spreading, and is ornamented with a thick and
glossy foliage. The gum is collected by chopping through the bark with a
hatchet and placing under each series of cuts a little clay cup formed
by the hands of the workman. About a gill of the sap accumulates in each
cup in the course of a day, and it is then transferred to receiving
vessels and taken to camp. The first use of the gum was made by the
South American Indians, who made shoes, bottles, playing balls and
various other articles from it. Their method for making a shoe was to
take a crude wooden last, which they covered with clay to prevent the
adhesion of the gum. It was then dipped in the sap, or the latter was
poured over it, which gave it a thin coating. It was then held over a
smoky fire, which gave it a dark color and dried the gum. When one
coating became sufficiently hard another was added, and smoked in turn,
and so successive coatings were applied until a sufficient thickness was
obtained. When the work was completed it was exposed for some days in
the sun, and while still soft the shoes were decorated as the fancy or
taste of the maker suggested. The clay forms were then broken out, and
the shoe stuffed with grass to keep it in shape for use or sale. In 1820
a pair of these clumsy shoes was brought to Boston and exhibited as a
curiosity. They were covered with gilding, and resembled the shoe of a
Chinaman. Subsequently considerable numbers of these shoes were brought
from South America, and being sold at a large price, they served to
stimulate Yankee ingenuity into devising methods of making them from the
raw material, which being brought as ballast in the ships from Brazil,
could be had cheaply. In France some attention had been given to the
material, and the rubber bottles of the Indians had been cut into narrow
threads which were woven into strips of cloth to form suspenders and
garters. In England an application of it in thin solution had been made
by a Mr. Macintosh, who spread it between two thicknesses of thin cloth
to form Macintosh water-proof coats. The first practical use of the gum
on a large scale was instituted by Mr. Chaffee in Roxbury, Mass., about
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