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Patent
- History Of U.S. Patent Office
In this article we're going
to do a brief historical review of the United States Patent
Office.
The first national patent
system was influenced by Thomas Jefferson in 1790. This was
actually added to the United States Constitution in order to
protect the rights of inventors. From this began the growth of
the American corporation. Even though the original thirteen
colonies has individual patent laws it wasn't until this
constitutional act that the patent system became uniform for
everyone.
Actually, the modern concept
of the patent itself was established in Great Britain in the
year 1449. That year King Henry VI issued a patent to John of
Utynam for stained glass manufacturing. The actual history of
the English patent system is important for understanding the
patent system of the United States but is not the focus of
this article. There are plenty of documents online where this
information can be found.
In the United States,
congress actually passed several patent acts; one in 1790, one
in 1793 and one in 1836. Each act added different things to
the patent system as we know it today.
The patent act of 1790, the
one influenced by Jefferson, required that all applications
for patents had some kind of model, whether it be a drawing or
prototype, to go along with the application. This was because
Jefferson believed ideas should not be patentable.
The patent act of 1793 was
actually a revision of the patent act of 1790 due to some
differences of opinions between Jefferson and Alexander
Hamilton who wanted to add provisions for overlapping patents,
where two inventors applied for the same or similar patents.
The act of 1793 created a patent board that was responsible
for issuing patents. A two-thirds majority of the board, made
up of the Secretary of State, Attorney General, and Secretary
of War, would be required to issue a patent. This act was
passed largely because of complaints by inventors that the act
of 1790 was not sufficient to protect their rights as
inventors.
It wasn't until the patent
act of 1836 that the United States Patent Office was actually
established. The patent office was created primarily because
of the inefficiency of the other two acts in processing
patents. Henry Ellsworth was mostly responsible for
establishing this act. He was also appointed the first
commissioner of patents.
Through this act a system was
created for distributing new patents to libraries in every
state. This way it would be easy for an inventor to research
whether or not a patent existed for a particular invention.
This would save the inventor a great deal of time applying for
a patent that he couldn't get because it was already issued.
Much has changed in the
patent office since those early days. What once took a
relatively short period of time now takes years as far as
securing a patent. Many times a patent isn't issued until long
after the technology has been around for quite some time.
Unfortunately in the current climate and with the rate of
technological advances increasing everyday, patents are now
viewed as nothing more than a bargaining chip in a court of
law.
Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to
Patents
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