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George Eastman
1854 - 1932

By mass-producing his inventions, the American inventor and
industrialist George Eastman (1854-1932) promoted photography as
a popular hobby. He was also a benefactor of educational
institutions.
George
Eastman was born in Waterville, N.Y., on July 12, 1854, and
educated in Rochester public schools. He advanced from messenger
to bookkeeper in the Rochester Savings Bank by 1877. Frugal with
money - his only extravagance amateur photography - he spent his
savings on cameras and supplies and went to Mackinac Island.
When photographic chemicals ruined his packed clothes, he became
disgusted with the wet-plate process.
In the 1870s American photography was still slow, difficult, and
expensive. Equipment included a huge camera, strong tripod,
large plateholder, dark tent, chemicals, water container, and
heavy glass plates. Eastman experimented with dry-plate
techniques. He was the first American to contribute to
photographic technology by coating glass plates with gelatin and
silver bromide. In 1879 his coating machine was patented in
England, in 1880 in America. He sold his English patent and
opened a shop to manufacture photographic plates in Rochester.
To eliminate glass plates, Eastman coated paper with gelatin and
photographic emulsion. The developed film was stripped from the
paper to make a negative. This film was rolled on spools.
Eastman and William Walker devised a lightweight roll holder to
fit any camera.
Amateurs could develop pictures after Eastman substituted
transparent film for the paper in 1884. Flexible film was
created by Hannibal Goodwin of New York and a young Eastman
chemist, Henry Reichenback. The long patent dispute between
Goodwin and Eastman was the most important legal controversy in
photographic history. A Federal court decision on Aug. 14, 1913,
favoured Goodwin. Goodwin's heirs and Ansco Company, owners of
his patent, received $5,000,000 from Eastman in 1914.
In 1888 Eastman designed a simple camera, the Kodak (Eastman's
coined word, without meaning), which was easy to carry and
eliminated focusing and lighting. With a 100-exposure roll of
celluloid film, it sold for $25.00. After taking the pictures
and sending the camera and $10 to the Rochester factory, the
photographer received his prints and reloaded camera. Eastman's
slogan, "You press the button, we do the rest," was well known.
Anticipating photography's increased popularity, in 1892 Eastman
incorporated the Eastman Kodak Company. This was one of the
first American firms to mass-produce standardized products and
to maintain a chemical laboratory. By 1900 his factories at
Rochester and at Harrow, England, employed over 3,000 people and
by 1920 more than 15,000. Eastman, at first treasurer and
general manager, later became president and finally board
chairman.
Daylight-loading film and cameras eliminated returning them to
the factory. To Eastman's old slogan was added "or you can do it
yourself." A pocket Kodak was marketed in 1897, a folding Kodak
in 1898, noncurling film in 1903, and colour film in 1928.
Eastman film was indispensable to Thomas Edison's motion
pictures; Edison's incandescent bulb was used by Eastman and by
photographers specializing in "portraits taken by electric
light."
Eastman's staff worked on abstract problems of molecular
structure and relativity, as well as on photographic
improvements. During World War I his laboratory helped make
America's chemical industry independent of Germany, and finally
the world leader.
Concerned with employee welfare, Eastman was the first American
businessman to grant workers dividends and profit sharing. He
systematically gave away his huge fortune to the University of
Rochester (especially the medical school and Eastman School of
Music), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Hampton
Institute, Tuskegee Institute, Rochester Dental Dispensary, and
European dental clinics.
After a long illness the lonely, retiring bachelor committed
suicide on March 14, 1932, in Rochester. He had written to
friends, "My work is done. Why wait?"
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
Inventor, manufacturer, and philanthropist. Born at Waterville,
New York, Eastman left school at age fourteen to help support
his widowed mother and two sisters as an errand boy in a real
estate office. He became interested in photography as a youth,
and while working as a bookkeeper in a Rochester bank, he
perfected a process for making dry plates in his home studio. In
1880, without quitting his job, he established the Eastman Dry
Plate Company with partner Henry A. Strong in the loft of a
factory building. So rapidly did this business grow that Eastman
left the bank to devote himself full-time to the fledgling
photography firm in September 1881.
During the next decade, Eastman transformed photography from a
laborious and costly art into an easy, inexpensive hobby enjoyed
by millions. In 1884, he replaced cumbersome glass plates with a
paper-backed roll film which he invented and marketed through
the reorganized Eastman Dry Plate and Film Company. Four years
later, he introduced the hand-held Kodak; loaded with film
sufficient for one hundred photographs, it produced round
pictures two and one-half inches in diameter. "You push the
button--we do the rest," Eastman advertised. After snapping a
hundred pictures, the amateur photographer returned the loaded
camera to the factory where the photos were processed and the
camera reloaded.
In 1889 Eastman applied for a patent for celluloid film, which
provided the foundation for an entirely new and unforeseen
industry--moving pictures. Three years later, after developing
daylight-loading film, the firm was reorganized as the Eastman
Kodak Company; in 1901 it became the Eastman Kodak Company of
New Jersey, capitalized at $35 million. To minimize his
competition, Eastman bought out many rivals, acquired patent
rights from others, and made exclusive contracts with his
wholesale and retail dealers. By 1928, the year the company
perfected colour photography for motion pictures, Eastman Kodak
was the largest manufacturer of photographic supplies in the
world, producing everything required by amateur, commercial,
scientific, and motion picture photographers.
Eastman's phenomenal success was rooted in continuing scientific
research, cost-efficient manufacturing methods, and a loyal
labor force. He was one of the first American manufacturers to
employ full-time research chemists; he pioneered large-scale
production at low costs for a world market; and he introduced
profit-sharing and stock-option plans for employees. At the time
of his death, the company operated manufacturing plants in
Rochester, New York, Kingsport, Tennessee, and England, France,
Germany, Australia, and Hungary. The main plant at Kodak Park,
Rochester, spread over 480 acres and employed nineteen thousand
people.
Eastman never married, and his philanthropies, including
bequests, totalled more than $75 million. His primary
beneficiary was the University of Rochester, to which he
contributed $35 million for the Eastman Theatre, the School of
Music, the School of Medicine and Dentistry, and the College for
Women. Lesser sums were donated to the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology and the Hampton and Tuskegee institutes. His
hobbies included big-game hunting and growing orchids, and he
advocated a calendar based on thirteen months of twenty-eight
days. Long in poor health, he took his own life at age
seventy-seven. The note he left read: "My work is done. Why
wait?"
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This web page was last updated on:
19 December, 2008
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