In 1800, shoes in the United States were made by craftsmen, each
trained to create an entire shoe. A century later, shoes were
mass-produced in factories employing dozens of machines and
specialized workers. Ross Thomson describes this transition from
craft to mechanized production in one of the largest American
industries of the nineteenth century.
Early shoe machinery originated through innovations made by
shoemakers, tailors, and especially machinists. It continued to
evolve through a process of "learning by selling," in which sales
of one generation of machines led to technological learning and
ongoing invention by those who used, serviced, and sold them. As a
result of this process, the mechanization of the shoe industry and
the manufacturers of the machinery it used -- including such firms
as Singer and United Shoe Machinery -- evolved together.
In researching the process of industrialization, Thomson examined
nearly 8,000 patents. Comparing the patent information with
directories for more than eighty American cities, he was able to
find out who the inventors were, who employed them, how many
patents they held, and the extent to which their inventions were
used.
Originally published in 1989.
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