Amos Whitney Born: 8-Oct-1832 Birthplace: Biddeford, ME Died: 5-Aug-1928 Location of death: Portland, ME Cause of death: unspecified Remains: Buried, Cedar Hill Cemetery, Hartford, CT
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Business, Engineer Party Affiliation: Republican Nationality: United States Executive summary: Co-Founder of Pratt & Whitney Amos Whitney began his apprenticeship as a machinist when he was 13, following in his father's footsteps. In the late 1850s he met and befriended Francis A. Pratt, a co-worker at the Phoenix Iron Works, and in 1860 they opened their own machine shop, Pratt & Whitney. The shop first manufactured automatic silk winders, but soon expanded into guns and gun-making machinery. Five years after opening the shop, Whitney was able to quit his day job and work full-time there. In the company's quest for perfectly interchangeable parts, Pratt & Whitney became famous for funding the research, design, and construction of the Rogers-Bond comparator, which ascertained the exact length of the foot to 1/50,000th of an inch. This allowed the mass production of precision interchangeable parts, and facilitated the development of large-scale industrial manufacturing. He was a distant cousin of cotton gin inventor Eli Whitney. Father: Aaron Whitney (machinist) Mother: Rebecca Perkins Whitney Wife: Laura Johnson Whitney (m. 8-Sep-1856) Son: Clarence Whitney (Pratt & Whitney executive) Daughter: Nettie Whitney
Essex Machine Co. (1845-50)
Colt Firearms Co. (1850-56)
Phoenix Iron Works (1856-65)
Pratt & Whitney Co-Founder & Superindent (1860-1920)
American Society of Mechanical Engineers English Ancestry
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