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Eli Whitney (December 8, 1765 - January 8, 1825) was an
American inventor who is
credited with creating the first cotton gin in 1793 (patented on March 14,
1794), which removed the seeds from cotton, which
until that time was extremely labor-intensive work.
There exists controversy over whether the idea of the cotton gin and its constituent elements can rightly be attributed to Eli
Whitney; unresolved is whether or not Catherine Littlefield Greene should be credited with the invention of the cotton gin, or
at least its inception. It is known that she associated with Eli Whitney (along with other historical figures such as George and Martha Washington). Additional credence is lent by the fact that women were not allowed patents in
American antiquity.
Whitney invented the American System of manufacturing, and the
assembly line, and was first to use them when he won a contract with the
U.S. Government to create muskets. Whitney's concepts were later exploited by Henry Ford and others in manufacturing industry.
Born in Westboro, Massachusetts, he graduated from
Yale College in 1792. While his
ideas were innovative and useful, they were so easy to understand and reproduce that the concepts and designs were duplicated by
others. Whitney's company that produced cotton gins went out of business in 1797.
He never patented his later inventions, one of which was a milling
machine.
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