RouterPlanes

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This is the original Metal Router Type Study Page created by Lars Larson in 1996 and published by Jay Sutherland. These pages were lost for some time then later rescued and republished with permission of the original publisher.

Metal Router Manufacturers

Metal routers were sold by the companies listed below, though some companies actually had their routers manufactured by others. The Stanley router design is based on a patent granted to Henry Cope in 1884.The amount of information presented on router models varies from company to company.

Henry Cope

De Huff
Keen Kutter
Marples
Millers Falls
Ohio Tool
Phelps
Preston
Record
Sargent
Stanley
Winchester


Router Patents 1883-1916

    272,801  H. L. Tupper         Feb. 20, 1883
    294,724  H. P. Cope           Mar.  4, 1884   Assigned to Stanley
    350,352  J. L. De Huff        Oct.  5, 1886
    378,854  J. A. Trout          Feb. 28, 1888   Assigned to Stanley
    420,232  G. Heymeier          Jan. 28, 1890   Of Bremen, Germany
    609,681  A. J. Kniffen        Aug. 23, 1898
    685,411  A. F. Schade         Oct. 29, 1901   Assigned to Stanley
    707,085  F. Clayton           Aug. 19, 1902   Of Pudsey, England
    717,883  R. P. Mathews        Jan.  6, 1903   To Sandusky Tool Co.
    793,297  F. Hesley            Jun. 27, 1905
    865,560  G. H. Bartlett       Sep. 10, 1907   Assigned to Stanley
    902,977  A. Link              Nov.  3, 1908
  1,012,591  E. A. Schade         Dec. 26, 1911   Assigned to Stanley
  1,026,053  T. B. Saner          May  14, 1912   Assigned to Stanley
  1,031,509  B. Aylor             Jul.  2, 1912
  1,195,799  C. Fink              Aug. 22, 1916

With only sixteen routers patented between the years 1883 and 1916, note that six of them, almost 40%, were assigned to Stanley.


Henry Cope

Origins of the Stanley No. 71 Router Plane

Henry Cope was a pattern maker working for the Detroit Stove Works when he patented his first router plane in 1884. (Patent No. 294,724: filed January 12, 1884 and granted March 4, 1884.)

Design Changes

Cope modified his first router model (Type 1) by redesigning the cutter locking collar (Type 2).

Cashing In

Cope sold his router plane patent rights to Stanley Rule & Level Co. in 1884. Later that year Stanley introduced it's No. 71, a slightly larger version of Cope's router plane.

Trivia Corner

John Henry Bissell was an attorney who owned half the rights to Cope's router patent. He was born in 1846, and his law offices were located at 80 Griswald Street, Detroit, MI. He must have been very prominent as he had a telephone in 1884. Henry Cope lived at 215 McDougall Avenue, Detroit, MI for the years 1884 and 1885. His brother George also worked at the Stove Works. In 1886 Cope quit his job and opened his own business, The Excelisior Stove Pattern Company, at 59-61 Fort Street in Detroit. Henry Cope was listed as President, with his brother George as Secretary and Treasurer. I would venture that this all came about with the money he received from selling the patent to Stanley Rule & Level Co. All this not being enough, he was married in 1886 to Catherine (the Widow) Philps. Things must have continued to go well for him, as he had a telephone installed by 1889.



Acknowedgements

Lars Larson wishes to thank the following people for helping with this metal router type study: Dave Heckel Kerry McCalla Ron Pearson Allen Foster Tom Lamond Bill Badde Alice Larson Reg Eaton


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