Eliphalet Remington AKA Eliphalet Remington, Jr. Born: 28-Oct-1793 Birthplace: Suffield, CT Died: 12-Aug-1861 Location of death: Ilion, NY Cause of death: Heart Failure Remains: Buried, Ilion Cemetery, Ilion, NY
Gender: Male Religion: Christian Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Business Party Affiliation: Republican [1] Nationality: United States Executive summary: Founder of Remington Arms In 1816, farmer and blacksmith Eliphalet Remington needed a new rifle but could not afford to purchase one, so he made his own rifle from scrap iron in his smithing shop. It was equal to if not superior to store-bought weaponry, and Remington was soon hired by neighbors as a riflemaker, and by the 1820s Remington's rifles were sold throughout New England. Remington introduced America's first gun barrel made from solid steel (1845), the popular Beal revolver (late 1850s) and the breach-loading gun that superseded the conventional muzzle-loading rifle (1861). With his three sons, he incorporated the company as E. Remington & Sons in 1856. Business exploded during the American Civil War, but Remington died of a heart attack while overseeing munitions manufacture early in the war. His business, now known as Remington Arms, later manufactured velocipedes (early bicycles), burglar alarms, gasoline-powered engines, and of course, typewriters. [1] Formerly a Whig Father: Eliphalet Remington (b. 1768, d. 1828) Mother: Elizabeth Kilbourn Remington (b. 1770, d. 1843) Sister: Mary Remington Wife: Abigail Paddock Remington (b. 1792, m. 12-May-1814, d. 1841, two daughters and three sons) Son: Philo Remington (President of Remington Arms, b. 31-Oct-1816, d. 4-Apr-1889) Son: Samuel Remington (Remington executive, b. 1819, d. 1892) Son: Eliphalet Remington III (Remington executive, b. 1828, d. 1924) Daughter: Mary Ann Remington Daughter: Maria Remington
Remington Arms Founder and President (1816)
Requires Flash 7+ and Javascript.
Do you know something we don't?
Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile
Copyright ©2019 Soylent Communications
|