Does anyone
remember the National Gate Company? It was a concern started in 1903 for the
manufacture of an invention by Mr. George S. Patrick of Dicksville in the Town
of Marshall.
That invention was
described as a "self opening and closing gate," made of iron pipe and
wire. The gate was constructed so that the wheels of a wagon passing over a
small iron hoop which, when pressed down, pulled a small chain fastened at
the bottom of the hinge end of the gate.
This caused the latch to lift and the weight swung the gate inward. When the
wagon had passed through, the chain was released and the gate closed.
The National
Gate Company was in the old cheese factory on Route 315, where an engine and
other machinery for the manufacture of the gates were installed. The capital
stock was $15,000, and the officers were as follows: president, Robert Hadcox;
vice-president W.F. Kimball; secretary and treasurer Abram Van Vechten;
superintendent of construction, George S. Patrick.
Mr. Patrick,
who was a prominent hop grower and farmer, secured a patent for his innovative design
through patent attorneys in Utica. He exhibited the self-opening gate at the
Brookfield Fair in 1903, which captured the attention of many people, including
W.C. McAdam, who termed the invention an important industry for the Town of
Marshall and became it's attorney.
The only
other mention of the National Gate Company was notice of the dissolution of the
company in 1915. Mr. Patrick, after serving the town in one capacity or
another, passed away in 1928.
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