Then came improvements in making nails, in making bedsteads, in
the manufacture of boats, and for propelling boats by cattle. On
August 26, 1791, James Rumsey, John Stevens, and John Fitch (all
three will appear again in this narrative) took out patents on
means of propelling boats. On the same day Nathan Read received
one on a process for distilling alcohol.
More than fifty patents were granted under the Patent Act of
1790, and mechanical devices were coming in so thick and fast
that the department heads apparently found it inconvenient to
hear applications. So the Act of 1790 was repealed. The second
Patent Act (1793) provided that a patent should be granted as a
matter of routine to any one who swore to the originality of his
device and paid the sum of thirty dollars as a fee. No one except
a citizen, however, could receive a patent. This act, with some
amendments, remained in force until 1836, when the present Patent
Office was organized with a rigorous and intricate system for
examination of all claims in order to prevent interference.
Protection of the property rights of inventors has been from the
beginning of the nation a definite American policy, and to this
policy may be ascribed innumerable inventions which have
contributed to the greatness of American industry and multiplied
the world's comforts and conveniences.
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