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US68005A - Condensed le at her peg - Google Patents

Condensed le at her peg Download PDF

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Publication number
US68005A
US68005A US68005DA US68005A US 68005 A US68005 A US 68005A US 68005D A US68005D A US 68005DA US 68005 A US68005 A US 68005A
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pegs
peg
leather
condensed
wooden
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43BCHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF FOOTWEAR; PARTS OF FOOTWEAR
    • A43B23/00Uppers; Boot legs; Stiffeners; Other single parts of footwear
    • A43B23/20Nails, pegs, pins, clamps, or tacks, for footwear

Definitions

  • Our invention consists Vin making pegs of leather by condensing or pressing the leather into suitable form, and thereby rendering it sufficiently rigid to be used like ordinary shoepegs.
  • Figure l represents a single peg.
  • Figs. 2, 3, and 4 represent a series of them connected in the form of a strip.
  • Fig. 5 represents a series of the pegs formed into a coil or roll for use.
  • Hcretofore pegs for securing the soles of boots and shoes, and for similar purposes, have been made ot' Wood; but it is Wellknown that wooden pegs are objectionable, Jfor the reasons that they shrink, and thereby become loose, thus failing to hold the sole tightly in place, and also because, by the alternate wetting, drying, and heating to which they are necessarily subjected, they are rendered brittle and break off.
  • a bootor shoe made with Wooden pegs is rendered stiii' and unyielding to a degree that makes it objectionable.
  • the object of our invention is to produce apeg that shall obviate these objections, and that will answer all the desired lobjects or uses far better than the wooden peg does.
  • Pegs thus constructed are found to retain their hold far better than wooden pegs.V
  • the leather, hobos condensed or compressed. becomes very much enlarged when Wet or bent, as the pegs will more or less in use in. a boot or shoe by swelling and the natural tendency of the leather to return to its original condition, and by this means it is obvious that they will till the hole more perfectly, and thus hold more tightly than Wooden pegs.
  • they are composed of a more pliable material it is evident that they will bend or yield more readily, and thus will render a shoe less StiiiI than wooden pegs do.
  • pegs have been made from rawhide as well as from hides prepared by being placed in a solution ot' oil,'shellac. alcohol, resin, and sulphur, and then dried; but pegs made from rawhide or from hides thus prepared we do not claim. i Having thus described our invention, what we claim is A peg made of condensed leather, whether the same is made in the form ot' single pegs or in the form of a corrugated or plain strip from which the pegs may be cut, substantially as described. l

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  • Treatment And Processing Of Natural Fur Or Leather (AREA)
  • Footwear And Its Accessory, Manufacturing Method And Apparatuses (AREA)

Description

UNITED STATES PATENT OEEICE.
CHARLES ROWLAND AND JOSEPH G. ROWLAND, OF QUINOY, ILLINOIS.
CONDENSED LEATHER PEG Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 68,005, dated August 20, 1867.
To all whom 'it may concern:
Be it known that We, O. Ron/LAND and J. G. ROWLAND, of Quincy, in the county of Adams and State of Illinois, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Sh0e Pegs; and we'do hereby declare that the following is a full, clear, and exact description thereof, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, making part of this specification, and to the letters ot reference marked thereon, like letters indicating like parts wherever they occur.
To enable others skilled in the art to construct and use. our invention, we will proceed to describe it.
Our invention consists Vin making pegs of leather by condensing or pressing the leather into suitable form, and thereby rendering it sufficiently rigid to be used like ordinary shoepegs.
Figure l represents a single peg. Figs. 2, 3, and 4 represent a series of them connected in the form of a strip. Fig. 5 represents a series of the pegs formed into a coil or roll for use.
Hcretofore pegs for securing the soles of boots and shoes, and for similar purposes, ,have been made ot' Wood; but it is Wellknown that wooden pegs are objectionable, Jfor the reasons that they shrink, and thereby become loose, thus failing to hold the sole tightly in place, and also because, by the alternate wetting, drying, and heating to which they are necessarily subjected, they are rendered brittle and break off.
A bootor shoe made with Wooden pegs is rendered stiii' and unyielding to a degree that makes it objectionable. l
The object of our invention is to produce apeg that shall obviate these objections, and that will answer all the desired lobjects or uses far better than the wooden peg does.
For this purpose we construct our improved peg of leather. rI`his we accomplish by taking strips "of leather ot' suitable size and thickness, and compressing them between dies of any suitable style in such a manner as to form them into 'pegs of the required size and form. These dies may consist of iiat blocks, with proper shaped recesses cut in their faces, or they may be formed on the surface of rolls, and the strips be compressed and cut or formed into pegs by being passed between them, this latter being the preferable method.
In ordinary cases, with good leather, nothing else is used, the leather itself being so condensed as to render it rigid and capable of being driven like an ordinary peg.
Incase the leather is soft or spongy we propose Ato saturate it with any suitable solu tion, such as shellac or the insoluble cement ordinarily used with leather, iu order to render the pegs more rigid when formed.
Pegs thus constructed are found to retain their hold far better than wooden pegs.V The leather, heilig condensed or compressed. becomes very much enlarged when Wet or bent, as the pegs will more or less in use in. a boot or shoe by swelling and the natural tendency of the leather to return to its original condition, and by this means it is obvious that they will till the hole more perfectly, and thus hold more tightly than Wooden pegs. As they are composed of a more pliable material, it is evident that they will bend or yield more readily, and thus will render a shoe less StiiiI than wooden pegs do.
It isv also obvious that such a peg will be far more tough and lasting than a wooden ture of harness as a substitutefor sewing straps together, as is usually done.
We are aware that pegs have been made from rawhide as well as from hides prepared by being placed in a solution ot' oil,'shellac. alcohol, resin, and sulphur, and then dried; but pegs made from rawhide or from hides thus prepared we do not claim. i Having thus described our invention, what we claim is A peg made of condensed leather, whether the same is made in the form ot' single pegs or in the form of a corrugated or plain strip from which the pegs may be cut, substantially as described. l
cHs. EOWLAND. J. e. ROWLAND.
Witnesses FRANcIs G. MOORE, HARRY 00X.
They are also adapted io the join
US68005D Condensed le at her peg Expired - Lifetime US68005A (en)

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