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Manufacturers Index - Amoskeag Co.
History
Last Modified: May 26 2011 8:59AM by joelr4
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Samuel Slater

English & American Tool Builders By Joseph Wickham Roe 1916

Amoskeag Co., Factory

      In 1822 Samuel Slater, Larned Pitcher and three others bought a little two-story building at what was then Goffstown, on the Merrimac River, and founded the great Amoskeag Manufacturing Company, and the city of Manchester, N. H. It is now known as the greatest textile mill in the world, but the company's original charter was very broad, and, in addition to its other interests, the company operated for many years one of the largest and most influential machine shops in the country, where were built locomotives, engines, boilers, all kinds of textile machinery, machine tools and mill machinery.

In 1825, Ira Gay was the chief mechanic of the Nashua Manufacturing Co., where he developed printing machinery. According to "The History of Manchester [NH]", an 1851 book by C. E. Potter, in 1831 Gay became the clerk of the newly formed Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. Gay received an 1836 patent for a planer of an interesting design. Planer knives were mounted on the beveled face of a large beveled disk, and the disk was placed underneath the planer's feed carriage. The disk's shaft was angled so that the knives were horizontal when they hit the underside of the stock to be planed. The knives thus took gently rounded cuts out of the stock. A pair of pressure rollers both fed the stock and held it firmly to the bed. Gay's design was markedly different from that of the Woodworth planer, but Woodworth was still able to stop its manufacture. Gay died 20 Aug 1837.

Ira Gay, son of Ebenezer Gay, was born October 17, 1790. He was married July 25, 1813, to Mary White, and they resided first at Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and afterwards in Nashua, New Hampshire. Ira Gay died August 20, 1837. His wife died October 15, 1865. Ira and Mary (White) Gay had thirteen children, and the parents and some of the children were members of the Olive Street Congregational Church in Nashua, New Hampshire. Ira Gay was a machinist and inventor. He possessed a mechanical genius of the first order, and made many valuable improvements in manufacturing machinery. For several years he was agent of the Nashua Manufacturing Company, and at the time of his death was a director of the Nashua and Lowell Railroad, and one of a committee to superintend the building of the road. He was the first clerk and one of the first directors of the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company of Manchester, New Hampshire.

Information Sources

  • English and American tool builders By Joseph Wickham Roe 1916
  • American Lathe Builders: 1810-1910 by Kenneth L. Cope, 2001
  • The History of Manchester1851
  • Historic homes and places and genealogical and personal memoirs 1908 Volume 1 page 235 by William Richard Cutter