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| Willcox and Gibbs Antique Sewing Machine |
The item you are looking at is a Willcox and Gibbs antique sewing machine.
They were produced from 1857 to 1876 for a total of 279,637 machines. The
following is a history of how this machine came to be and why it was considered
the top machine for its time. It is from the page http://www.ismacs.net.
"Getting the first Willcox and Gibbs machine from drawing board to
the shop counter was an adventure beset with more engineering problems than
most. Willcox, who was in charge of production, approached the Providence,
Rhode Island, company of Brown and Sharpe who were at that time makers of
clocks, watches and measuring instruments, and asked if it would be interested
in producing the new sewing machine. This was, in some ways a strange request,
for the company he had chosen was very small with only five lathes, one
drill and a couple of planers. But he went along in late 1857 or early '58
with the prototype he had made himself in an attempt to get a costing on
the job. Brown and Sharpe were a little cagey, not wanting to commit to
a price for work of which they had no experience. Eventually Willcox and
Lucien Sharpe reached a compromise. The machine shop would produce a batch
of 12 machines and then the cost could be accurately gauged. To hedge his
bets Sharpe wanted an agreement whereby Willcox would pay $3 per day during
the development time. What's more, Sharpe wanted to build the machines using
specially-made dies and tooling rather than as one-offs. Willcox also had
to agree to pay for this work even if the machine was not a commercial success.
This idea of special tooling and, therefore, the complete interchangeability
of parts, almost led to the downfall of the project before the first machine
was finished. Work began in March 1858 when the first drawings were made
and soon the local New England Bull Company was busy on the frame castings.
About four of Brown and Sharpe's men, aided by Charles Gibbs, worked full
time to produce the tools which would eventually make the sewing-machine
parts, but at the end of May, Lucien Sharpe had to write to Willcox and
admit that this work was taking far longer than expected. Perhaps to encourage
the manufacturer, Willcox upped his order to 100 machines of which 50 were
to be of the type already being worked and 50 be of a smaller model. It's
not known at this time whether the machine we know today is the larger or
smaller version. By the end of July the letters from Sharpe to Willcox were
a little more optimistic, speaking of the end of the job being in sight,
and of buying new machines to hasten things along. Still no price was given.
Then more snags cropped up. When iron castings cool they can often develop
"chill spots" where the material is very hard. This happened to the Bull
Company castings, and to save wear on drills and reamers, all the castings
had to be annealed to remove the hard spots. This, plus other problems,
led Sharpe to write to Willcox again in September saying that he was very
much discouraged over how the job was going, that more work was still being
done on tooling than on the actual machines and that it would still be many
weeks before the first batch was finished. Perhaps Willcox's patience was
wearing a little thin, for he remonstrated with Sharpe reminding him of
their original production target date of many weeks previous. In his defense
Sharpe replied that the extra time had been taken getting things right and
had they rushed an imperfect machine onto the market - as other manufacturers
had done - the new company's reputation could have been destroyed at birth.
When the figures were finally totaled, it was found that Brown and Sharpe
had spent 10 times its original budget just on the tooling for the machines.
But in October 1858 it all came together. Sharpe wrote to Willcox saying
that the first 50 machines were on the final assembly benches and that the
firm was now able to produce at the rate of 5000 per year. Fortunately,
for all concerned, the machine was an instant success, and the small tool
room quickly became a factory, continuing to make the W&G machines well
into the 1970s. Brown and Sharpe continued with its instrument business
and developed a world-famous name for selling specialised machine tools
to other sewing-machine manufacturers. Among those who worked on Willcox
and Gibbs machines at the Brown and Sharpe factory was one Henry Leland
who was in charge of the sewing-machine department from 1878 until 1890.
Leland went on to devote his skills that he had learned on sewing machines
to forming the prestigious Cadillac Car Company - the Rolls Royce of American
automobiles." As you can see the sewing machine needs a lot of work.
It could use a sandblasting and a new paint job to make it a nice display
piece. I am not sure if it could ever be brought back to working condition
but you never know, its lasted over 150 years so its obviously a quality
piece of machinery.
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