Sylvester H. Roper Explained

Sylvester H. Roper
Birth Date:24 November 1823
Death Place:Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
Death Cause:Heart failure, motorcycle crash
Occupation:Machinist, inventor
Known For:Roper steam velocipede, repeating shotgun, shotgun choke
Spouse:Almira D. Hill
Children:Charles Roper
Awards:Motorcycle Hall of Fame (2002)

Sylvester Howard Roper (November 24, 1823 – June 1, 1896) was an American inventor and a pioneering builder of early automobiles and motorcycles from Boston, Massachusetts. In 1863 he built a steam carriage, one of the earliest automobiles.[1] The Roper steam velocipede of 1867–1869 may have been the first motorcycle,[2] for which he was inducted into the Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 2002. He is also the inventor of the shotgun choke and a revolver repeating shotgun.[3] [4]

Early life

Sylvester H. Roper's father, Merrick, was a cabinetmaker, born 1792 in Sterling, Massachusetts. Merrick came to Francestown, New Hampshire in 1807 and married Sylvester's mother Susan Fairbanks in 1817. Sylvester had an older brother who was a housepainter, two younger sisters, and a younger brother who became a machinist at the Singer Sewing Machine Manufactory in Boston, then later a jeweler.Sylvester Roper was born on November 24, 1823. From an early age he displayed mechanical talent. At age 12 he made a stationary steam engine, even though he had never seen one before in person; this invention was kept on display in the laboratory of the Francestown Academy. At age 14, he built a locomotive engine, and only afterward saw such an engine for the first time in Nashua. Roper left Francestown at a young age and worked as a machinist, first in Nashua, then in Manchester, New York,[5] and Worcester. He married Almira D. Hill on April 20, 1845, in Providence, Rhode Island. In 1854 he moved to Boston, Massachusetts living in the Roxbury neighborhood at 299 Eustis Street.

Inventor

About the same time he came to Boston, Roper invented his Handstitch Sewing Machine. In 1861 he invented a hot air engine and filed several patents for a hot air engines.[6] He eventually succeeded in building engines ranging from 1 to 4 HP. In 1869 over 200 roper's air engines were in operation. Roper worked for the Springfield Armory during the Civil War. Roper's work eventually came to the attention of other inventors and engineers of the area, including Elias Howe, Alvan Clark, Christopher Miner Spencer. Roper was observed driving his steam carriage around Boston in 1863. One such 1863 carriage went to the Henry Ford Museum.

Roper invented the first shotgun choke, short tubes that could be threaded onto, or removed from, the outside of the shotgun barrel to vary the shot spread to suit different targets and ranges. Roper and Christopher Miner Spencer were granted a joint patent for a repeating shotgun mechanism on April 4, 1882.[3] Later, on April 21, 1885, Roper alone obtained a patent for an improved shotgun loading mechanism.[4] Roper and his son, Charles, designed a factory producing screw making equipment, which Charles Roper continued to manage after his father's death.

Death while riding

On June 1, 1896, Roper rode one of his later velocipede models, a Pope Manufacturing Company Columbia bicycle with a steam engine added, to the Charles River bicycle track, near Harvard Bridge, Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he made several laps, pacing bicyclists there, including professional rider Tom Butler[7] who could not keep up with the steam powered machine. Roper was clocked at 2 minutes 1.4 seconds for the flying mile, for a top speed 40mph He was seen to be unstable and then fall on the track, suffering a head wound, and was found dead. After autopsy, the cause of death was found to be heart failure, although it is unknown if the crash was the cause of the stress on his heart, or if his heart failed prior to the crash.

List of patents

NumberTitleIssue dateCo-inventor
PadlockNovember 9, 1842
Improvement in Hot-Air EnginesMarch 18, 1862
Improvement In Revolving Fire-ArmsApril 10, 1866
Improvements In Detachable Muzzle For Shot-GunsJuly 14, 1868
Improvement In Knitting-MachineAugust 24, 1869
Improvement In Knitting-MachinesAugust 8, 1871
Magazine Fire-ArmApril 4, 1882Christopher M. Spencer
Metal-Screw MachineAugust 8, 1882Charles F. Roper
Metal-Screw MachineJune 17, 1884Charles F. Roper
Magazine-GunAugust 20, 1889
Magazine Fire-ArmOctober 29, 1889
Fire-EscapeFebruary 6, 1894
Fire EscapeMarch 6, 1894

External links

Notes and References

  1. See also:
  2. Book: Setright, L. J. K. . L. J. K. Setright . 1979 . The Guinness Book of Motorcycling Facts and Feats . . 0-85112-200-0 . 8–18 .
    Michaux-Perreaux year 1867 .
  3. US . 255894 . Magazine Fire-Arm . 4 April 1882 . . Sylvester H. Roper .
  4. US . 316401 . Magazine Fire-Arm . 21 April 1885 . Sylvester H. Roper .
  5. The history is unclear if this refers to Manchester (town), New York, Manchester (village), New York, or Manchester, New Hampshire, and New York state
  6. Web site: Roper's Hot Air Engine patents. hotairengines.org.
  7. The same Tom Butler was overtaken 10 feet from the finish by Major Taylor in the 1899 world track cycling championship. See