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Court and controversy: patenting science in the nineteenth century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Paul Lucier
Affiliation:
Department of Science and Technology Studies, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York 12180, USA.

Extract

In the autumn of 1851, on the occasion of the American Institute of New York's annual fair, the Boston chemist and geologist Charles Jackson chose as the subject of his address the ‘Encouragement and Cultivation of the Sciences in the United States’. Playing on popular enthusiasm for science and technology, Jackson rehearsed the wondrous progress of the arts and the role of science in that progress. Science was the ‘Hand-maiden of the Arts’, and most assuredly the ‘maid of honor’, he declared, for science was the ‘progressive power’ which inspired new inventions. These were commonplace assumptions of the time, and surely no one in his audience would have disputed them.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1996

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References

1 Jackson, C. T., ‘Encouragement and cultivation of the sciences in the United States, Twenty-Fourth Anniversary Address, before the American Institute, of the City of New-York, at the Tabernacle, on 16th of October, 1851’, Transactions of the American Institute (1851), 227–46.Google Scholar

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9 British Patent No. 13,292, 17 October 1850.

10 ‘The manufacture of coal oil. The first patent’, Scientific American (12 02 1859), 14, 186Google Scholar; and ‘Young versus Fernie’, The Law Times Reports (1864), 10, 861–5.Google Scholar

11 US Patent No. 8833, 23 March 1852.

12 In partnership with Edward Meldrum and the respected metropolitan geologist Edward William Binney, Young established three paraffine oil manufactories: E. W. Binney & Company of Bathgate, Scotland; E. Meldrum & Company of Glasgow; and James Young & Company of Manchester. For more on Binney see Binney, J., The Centenary of a Nineteenth-Century Geologist: Edward William Binney, Taunton, 1912.Google Scholar

13 US Patent Nos. 11,203, 11,204, and 11,205, 27 June 1854. For more on Gesner and Kerosene see Beaton, Kendall, ‘Dr. Gesner's Kerosene: the start of American oil refining’, Business History Review (1955), 29, 2853CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Butt, , ‘Legends’ op. cit. (8)Google Scholar; and Williamson, Harold F. and Daum, Arnold R., The American Petroleum Industry: The Age of Illumination, 1859–1899, Evanston, 1959, 4360.Google Scholar

14 ‘Young's coal oil patent’, Scientific American (12 03 1859), 14, 221.Google Scholar The article generated a large response, and, under the rubric of ‘The coal oil controversy’, Scientific American published some fifteen articles on Young's patent, from March to December 1859.

15 ‘Young's coal oil patent’, Scientific American (5 03 1859), 14, 213.Google Scholar

16 ‘Young's coal oil patent’, op. cit. (14).

17 ‘The manufacture of coal oil. The first patent’, op. cit. (10).

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20 Controversies over the precision of patent specifications are as old as patents themselves. The earliest examination of this issue involved James Watt and his patented steam engine; see Robinson, E., ‘James Watt and the Law of Patents’, Technology and Culture (1972), 13, 115–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar For a discussion of the social construction of patents and patent specifications see Cooper, C., Shaping Invention: Thomas Blanchard's Machinery and Patent Management in Nineteenth-Century America, New York, 1991.Google Scholar

21 This point was made explicit by the Commissioner of Patents, Gale, L. D., in ‘On the relations of the American patent system to the progress of science’, Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1854), 8, 292301.Google Scholar

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24 Antisell, , op. cit. (22), 15.Google Scholar

25 For very similar histories, also written by defenders of Young's patent, see Paul, B. H., ‘On destructive distillation, considered in reference to modern industrial arts’Google Scholar, read before the Society of Arts, 27 May 1863, reprinted in Chemical News (1863), 7, 282–3, 295–7Google Scholar, and (1863), 8, 56–8, 78–9; and Frankland, E., ‘On artificial illumination’, Chemical News (1863), 7, 91–3.Google Scholar

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27 Stephen Hales, for instance, had distilled Newcastle coal and produced gas, liquid and tar; see Hales, S., Vegetable Staticks, London, 1727, ch. 6: ‘Analysis of the air’.Google Scholar

28 Reichenbach used coal from Moravian mines. See Farrar, W. V., ‘Reichenbach, Karl (or Carl)’, DSB, xi, 359–60.Google Scholar

29 Antisell, , op. cit. (22), 1415.Google Scholar

30 ‘Storer, Francis Humphreys’, Dictionary of American Biography, xviii, 94–5.Google Scholar

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32 Silliman, B. Jr, and Dana, J. D., ‘;Introduction to Frank H. Storer, “Review of Dr. Antisell's Work on Photogenic Oils, &c”’, American Journal of Science (1860), 30, 112.Google Scholar

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34 Antisell actually thought the review was ‘double handed’, meaning ‘the joint production of a young chemist and a more mature patent solicitor’. Antisell, T., ‘A scientific reviewer reviewed’, American Gas-Light Journal (16 07 1860), 2, 25–6.Google Scholar

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37 It must also be noted that Abraham Gesner played a role in the successful defence, at least in print, of American manufacturers. See Gesner, A., A Practical Treatise on Coal, Petroleum, and Other Distilled Oils, New York, 1861.Google Scholar

38 Binney, E. W. to Meldrum, E., 11 11 1859Google Scholar, quoted in Butt, , ‘Legends’, op. cit. (8), 25.Google Scholar

39 E. W. Binney and Company versus The Clydesdale Chemical Company, 1–7 November (Court of Session Edinburgh, 1860). The case was watched very closely in the United States for it was widely believed that outcome would set a precedent for the prosecution of similar American cases. See ‘Young's coal oil patent case’ Scientific American (5 01 1861), 4, 11Google Scholar; and ‘Coal oil patent – important case’, Scientific American (8 12 1860), 3, 378.Google ScholarThe American Gas-Light Journal published two accounts of the trial: ‘Coal-oil Important patent decision’, American Gas-Light Journal (1 12 1860), 2, 172Google Scholar; and ‘The paraffine pat case’ ibid. (1 January 1861), 2, 206.

40 ‘Coal oil. Important patent decision’, op. cit. (39).

41 ‘Young's coal oil patent case’, op. cit. (39).

42 See, however, Smith, R. and Wynne, B. (eds.), Expert Evidence: Interpreting Science in the Law, London, 1989Google Scholar; Hamlin, C., ‘Scientific method and expert witnesses: Victorian perspectives on a modern problem’, Social Studies of Science (1986), 16, 485573CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Fullmer, J. Z., ‘Technology, chemistry, and the law in early 19th-century England’, Technology and Culture (1980), 21, 128CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Brock, W. H., ‘The spectrum of science patronage’, in Patronage of Science in the Nineteenth Century (ed. Turner, G. L'E.), Leyden, 1976, 173206.Google Scholar Yet historians of medicine seem much more conscious of the relations between medicine and the law, as in Crawford, C., ‘Medicine and the law’, in Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine (ed. Bynum, W. F. and Porter, R.), 2 vols., London, 1993, ii, 1619–40Google Scholar; Clark, M. and Crawford, C. (eds.), Legal Medicine in History, Cambridge, 1993Google Scholar; Smith, R., Trial by Medicine: Insanity and Responsibility in Victorian Trials, Edinburgh, 1981Google Scholar; Jones, C. G., Expert Witnesses: Science, Medicine, and the Practice of Law, Oxford, 1994Google Scholar; and Mohr, J. C., Doctors and the Law: Medical Jurisprudence in Nineteenth-Century America, New York, 1993.Google Scholar

43 William Thomas Brande (1788–1866), FRS, was the successor to Humphry Davy as Professor of Chemistry at the Royal Institution in 1813 and editor of the Dictionary of Science and Arts from 1842 till his death. Alfred Swaine Taylor (1806–80) held the first professorship of medical jurisprudence at Guy's Hospital (1831–80) as well as a lectureship in chemistry (1832–80); he wrote Medical Jurisprudence (1843), the standard text of the time.

44 Cited in ‘The paraffine patent case’, op. cit. (39).

45 ‘Young's coal oil patent case’, op. cit. (39).

46 ‘Coal-oil. Important patent decision’, op. cit. (39).

47 James Young and Others versus Ebenezer Fernie and Others, 29 February–7 May (Courts of Chancery, 1864), reported in ‘Young versus Fernie’, The Law Times Reports, op. cit. (10). The trial received an extended review in the London Chemical News. See ‘Young v. Fernie’, Chemical News (21 05 1864), 9, 249–50Google Scholar; (28 May 1864), 9, 262–4; and (4 June 1864), 9, 273–6.

48 Hofmann was the first director of the Royal College of Chemistry (1845–63), and the most successful chemical expert of his generation; he annually augmented his income by £8000–£9000 as a legal consultant, see Brock, , op. cit. (42), 186.Google Scholar At the same time as he was defending Young, for example, Hofmann was the chief chemical expert for the plaintiff in the trial Renard versus Levinstein (Courts of Chancery, 1864), a patent dispute over a blue aniline dye. See ‘Renard v. Levinstein’, Chemical News (9 04 1864), 9, 168.Google Scholar For more on Hofmann's career see Bud, and Roberts, , op. cit. (7)Google Scholar; Beer, , op. cit. (4)Google Scholar; and Travis, , ‘Science's powerful companion’, op. cit. (5).Google Scholar

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52 Williamson, and Daum, , op. cit. (13)Google Scholar; and Lucier, P., ‘Petroleum: what is it good for?’, American Heritage of Invention and Technology (1991), 7, 5663.Google Scholar

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56 Jackson, , op. cit. (1), 237.Google Scholar

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63 Disinterestedness, of course, was one of the basic institutional elements of science for Robert K. Merton; see Merton, R. K., ‘The normative structure of science’, The Sociology of Science, Chicago, 1973, 267–78.Google Scholar Larry Stewart has made a persuasive case for the close interrelations of science and commerce in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; see Stewart, L., The Rise of Public Science: Rhetoric, Technology, and Natural Philosophy in Newtonian Britain, 1660–1750, Cambridge, 1992.Google Scholar Also see Dear, P., ‘From truth to disinterestedness in the seventeenth century’, Social Studies of Science (1992), 22, 619–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Tweedale, G., ‘Geology and industrial consultancy: Sir William Boyd Dawkins (1837–1929) and the Kent Coalfield’, BJHS (1991), 24, 435–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Lucier, , op. cit. (5), 264–7.Google Scholar

64 ‘Dr. Jackson's Address before the American Institute’, Scientific American (1 11 1851), 7, 51.Google Scholar

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