John P. Parker Biography (1827-1900)



Nationality
American
Gender
Male
Occupation
inventor

John P. Parker started life in slavery and rose to the role of innovator andbusinessman. The son of a black slave mother and a white father, he was bornat Norfolk, Virginia, and was sold into slavery at the age of eight. Sent toMobile, Alabama, he was purchased by a physician in 1843. While under the doctor's ownership, Parker learned to read and write. He was also apprenticed asa molder at an iron foundry. Twice his high productivity was a source of irritation to his coworkers, at the foundry in Mobile and at a foundry in New Orleans. At a third foundry, Parker stayed for two years and accumulated $1,800in savings, the amount he needed to purchase his freedom.

In 1845, a free man, he went first to Indiana, where he was involved in abolitionist activities and the Underground Railroad, which rescued people from slavery in the South. Parker married Miranda Boulden of Cincinnati in 1848. Twoyears later, Parker and his family moved to Ripley, Ohio, where he again became involved in abolitionism, aiding in the freeing of over a thousand slaves.

He established a small foundry in Ripley, the Ripley Foundry and Machine Company, in 1854 to manufacture castings. In 1863 he became a recruiter for the 27th Regiment of the United States Army, a black unit, to serve in the Civil War. His foundry also made castings for the war effort.

In 1884, Parker obtained a patent for a screw for tobacco presses and a yearlater patented a type of harrow called the Parker Pulverizer. Both items wereproduced in his foundry. These patents were issued at a time when patents were rarely awarded to black inventors. Parker's foundry remained in operationuntil 1918, well after his death.



User Contributions:

Comment about this article, ask questions, or add new information about this topic: