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Isaac Adams Jr.

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Isaac Adams Jr.

Isaac Adams Jr. (February 20, 1836 – July 24, 1911) was an American inventor and businessman, primarily notable for the invention of the first commercially viable nickel plating process.

Isaac Adams Jr. was born on February 20, 1836, into a newly wealthy Boston family. His father, also Isaac Adams, a successful inventor, businessman, and politician, by the time of Isaac Jr.'s birth had already invented the first commercially successful power printing press. Isaac Jr. spent his childhood mostly at the boarding schools after an untimely death of his mother.

Always a good student, per his father's insistence (Adams Sr. had no formal education, and needed a well-established son to operate easily in the upper society), Adams pursued the medical career, graduating from Bowdoin College and Harvard Medical School, getting his MD degree in 1862. Adams then moved on to the Êcole de Médicine in Paris, where he spent time mostly on chemistry, but also on glass blowing and medical studies. In particular, he learned from a French instrument maker, Adoplhe Gaiffe (1832–1887), skills to make Geissler tubes. He also reportedly visited Germany to study under Robert Bunsen. Upon return to Boston in the fall of 1864, Adams tried to become a practicing doctor, and failed, instead setting up a laboratory in South Boston, where from 1865 to 1868 he successfully manufactured Geissler tubes. Adams also experimented with "carbon burner" filament incandescent lamps ten years prior to Edison's inventions (first operational device was produced in 1865), eventually abandoning the electric lighting business due to the perceived impossibility of generating electricity at a reasonable cost.

In the late 1864 Adams became engaged to his cousin, Elizabeth Agry Adams, despite fierce objections of her guardian (and business partner of Adams' father), Seth Adams, who thought that Adams "is in no business that he manages in such a way that gives any evidence that he is likely to" be able to support the family. Elizabeth died in 1865, this might have prompted Adams to quit medicine.

Never completely stopping his work with nickel deposition, Adams became a recognized expert and filed multiple patents. An impulse was provided in the end of 1865 with the request by a Boston gas lighting manufacturer to produce an improved gas tip. 1500 tips were successfully manufactured using the nickel-plated iron, and Adams filed for a patent on the plating process on July 16, 1866. He was one of the founders of the United Nickel Company, formed on June 14, 1869, and served there as president, chemist and patent advisor until the dissolution of the business in 1890. The purpose of the company was to exploit Adams' patents; the founders made fortunes by licensing the patents to over 1000 businesses.

Another company, New York Nickel Plating Company, was established in New York City in July 1869. In October of the same year, Adams went to Europe with one of his investors, E. A. Quintard, with the goal to establish the plating industry there; a shop was immediately set up in Liverpool, another one in Paris in December 1869, a large plant in Birmingham by the spring of 1870. At first, the European plants faced essentially no competition.

At the same time, Adams married Lucille Bell (or Lucille Lods), in December 1869. The bride was related to Adams' now-partner Adolphe Gaiffe. In 1870, Franco-Prussian War broke out, forcing Adams to return to the US, where the Adams family had two sons (at the time of marriage, Lucille already had two young daughters), Walter Owen in 1876 and Isaac Rayne in 1880, Rayne eventually became an architect. Adams family had a house at 11 Shepard Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, close to the Harvard University and built a summer house in the Annisquam section of Gloucester, Massachusetts.

Multiple patents by Adams allowed the United Nickel Company in these "robber baron" times to successfully defend its market position through lawsuits, hundreds of them. The outcome of lawsuits to some extent was based on the fact that nobody was able to manufacture nickel plating before Adams' research, so the patents must have been valuable, and even token use of ingredients from the patents was considered an infringement.

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