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Mary Kenner
Mary Kenner
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Brief
Known For
Development of the adjustable sanitary belt and other household and personal items. Also, for facing racial discrimination which hindered her ability to capitalize on her inventions.
Key Dates and Places
  • Born Date: May 17, 1912.
  • Born Place: Monroe, North Carolina.
  • Death Date: January 13, 2006.
  • Death Place: Concord, North Carolina.
Career
  • Past occupations: Inventor, floral arranger, professional babysitter. She also held various other odd jobs to support herself.
  • Previous Place of Work: Various places related to her floral arranging and babysitting work. Also, any place she pursued her inventing.
Achievements and Recognition
  • Awards: While she didn't receive formal awards, her most notable achievement was inventing the adjustable sanitary belt, along with other inventions geared towards hygiene and household use. She holds five patents.
Education
Attended Howard University but had to drop out due to financial difficulties.
Main Milestones
Birth in Monroe, North Carolina
May 17, 1912
Mary Beatrice Davidson Kenner was born in Monroe, North Carolina, into a family with a rich history of invention. Her father, Sidney Nathaniel Davidson, was himself an inventor, holding a patent for a clothes press. This early exposure to innovation fostered Mary's own inventive spirit from a young age.
Early Inventive Inclination
Early Years
Even as a child, Mary showed a keen interest in problem-solving and inventing. She spent her time disassembling and reassembling objects, trying to understand how they worked and improve upon them. One notable childhood "invention" was a self-oiling door hinge, demonstrating her early aptitude for engineering solutions.
Navigating the Great Depression and Racial Segregation
1920s-1930s
Mary's early adulthood was significantly impacted by the Great Depression and the pervasive racial segregation of the time. These circumstances created significant financial challenges and limited opportunities for her to fully pursue her inventive passions. Despite these obstacles, she continued to develop her ideas and seek ways to bring them to fruition.
Invention of the Sanitary Belt
1950s
Mary Kenner invented the sanitary belt in the 1920s, but it wasn't until the 1950s that she was able to afford a patent. Her adjustable sanitary belt was a groundbreaking invention designed to provide greater comfort and prevent leaks, offering a more hygienic and reliable solution than existing methods during menstruation. The belt featured a moisture-proof napkin pocket.
Rejection Due to Race
1950s
Despite the clear benefits of her sanitary belt, a company that initially expressed interest in manufacturing it rejected the idea upon learning that Kenner was African American. This incident highlighted the significant racial discrimination prevalent during that era and the barriers faced by Black inventors.
Patent for Sanitary Belt
1959
Mary Kenner finally secured a patent for her sanitary belt in 1959. This marked a significant milestone in her journey as an inventor, officially recognizing her innovative design and granting her exclusive rights to its production and sale. She later created several variations of her design.
Continued Innovation
Later Inventions
Kenner didn't stop with the sanitary belt. Over the years, she accumulated a total of five patents, including one for a carrier attachment for invalid walkers and another for a bath and back washer. Her inventions reflected a desire to improve the lives of people with disabilities and enhance everyday convenience.
Patent for Carrier Attachment for Invalid Walkers
1976
Kenner patented a carrier attachment for invalid walkers in 1976. This invention allowed individuals using walkers to easily carry items such as purses, bags, or other personal belongings, improving their mobility and independence.
Death
January 13, 2006
Mary Beatrice Davidson Kenner passed away on January 13, 2006, leaving behind a legacy of ingenuity and perseverance. Despite facing significant challenges due to her race and gender, she remained committed to her inventive pursuits and made valuable contributions to improving personal hygiene and assistive devices.
Mary Kenner

Mary Beatrice Davidson Kenner (May 17, 1912 – January 13, 2006) was an American inventor most noted for her development of the adjustable sanitary belt.[1] Kenner received five patents, which includes a carrier attachment for invalid walker and bathroom tissue dispenser.[2]

Key Information

The Sanitary Belt

Early life and education

[edit]

Kenner was born in Monroe, North Carolina, and came from a family of inventors. She reportedly had a child that few knew of until recently,[when?] a daughter named Jasmine who grew up in South Dallas.[2] Her father, whom she credited for her initial interest in discovery, was Sidney Nathaniel Davidson (June 1890 – November 1958).[3] In his lifetime, he patented a clothing press which would fit in suitcases, though he ultimately made no money on the invention.[4] Her father also patented a window washer for trains and invented a stretcher with wheels for ambulances.[1] Her grandfather invented a light signal for trains, though this invention was stolen from him by a white man.[1] Her sister, Mildred Davidson Austin Smith (1916–1993), invented, patented, and commercially sold board games.[2][4]

Kenner and her family moved to Washington, D.C., in 1924;[5] here she walked the corridors of the United States Patent and Trademark Office to better understand how inventions become patents.[6]

Kenner graduated from Dunbar High School in 1931. She attended Howard University, however she was unable to finish due to financial difficulties[7] and dropped out after 18 months.[5] Kenner did not receive any college degree or professional training. Women at the time were kept out of scientific establishments or academic institutions.[8]

Inventions

[edit]

Kenner showed mechanical aptitude at the age of six by attempting to develop a self-oiling hinge.[5] She completed the patent application for her invention of the adjustable sanitary belt in 1954[2] and the patent was granted in 1956.[4][7] The invention was described as an eliminator for “chafing and irritation normally caused by devices of [its] class.”[2] However, the company that first showed interest in her invention, the Sonn-Nap-Pack Company, rejected it after they discovered that she was African American.[1][2][4][7] Kenner never made any money from the sanitary belt, because her patent expired and became public domain, allowing it to be manufactured freely.[1] She later invented a modification of the sanitary belt that included a "moisture resistant pocket."[9]

Between 1956 and 1987 she received five total patents for her household and personal item creations,[9][10] which is the largest number of patents held by a black woman.[5] She shared the patent on the toilet tissue holder with her sister, Mildred Davidson.[11] She also held a patent on a back washer that could be mounted on the shower or bathtub wall, also known as a backwash.[9][11] This invention was patented in 1987, with patent number 4696068.[11] She also patented the carrier attachment for a walker in 1959, after Mildred developed multiple sclerosis.

Personal life

[edit]

Mary Kenner worked as a professional floral arranger and had four flower shops scattered around the DC area.[1][12] She operated the business for 23 years[1] after dropping out of college due to financial difficulties. During World War II, Mary found a job with the federal government, working for the Census Bureau and General Accounting Office. She would chaperone younger women to attend military base dances in Washington, D.C. One night while chaperoning, Kenner met and fell in love with a soldier, whom she married in 1945. They divorced in 1950.[8] In 1951, Kenner was married to renowned heavyweight boxer James "Jabbo" Kenner. Together, they lived in McLean, Virginia, near the Kennedy family complex. They were foster parents to five boys.[1]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Hambrick, Arlene (1993). "Biographies of black female scientists and inventors: an interdisciplinary middle school curriculum guide: "What shall I tell my children who are black?"". ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst: 132–144 – via Google Scholar.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Sluby, Patricia C. "BLACK WOMEN AND INVENTIONS." Women's History Network News, no. 37, 1993, pp. 4.
  3. ^ "Mary Beatrice Davidson Kenner". Pioneering Women Herstory. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d Tsjeng, Zing (March 8, 2018). "The Forgotten Black Woman Inventor Who Revolutionized Menstrual Pads". Vice. Retrieved February 6, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d Walker, Ezekiel J. (November 9, 2022). "Even as a former florist, inventor Mary Kenner never got her flowers". The Black Wall Street Times. Retrieved December 7, 2023.
  6. ^ Riggio, Olivia (February 3, 2021). "Women's History Month Profiles: Mary Beatrice Davidson Kenner, Inventor". DiversityInc. Retrieved March 9, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c Laura S. Jeffrey (1 July 2013). Amazing American Inventors of the 20th Century. Enslow Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-1-4646-1159-9.
  8. ^ a b "Mary Beatrice Davidson Kenner: The Forgotten Inventor Who Changed Women's Health Forever". stylemagazine.com. Retrieved March 9, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c Buck, K. (2017, Mar 02). Black female inventors and scientists. Los Angeles Sentinel
  10. ^ David, Lenwood. "Women Inventors". NCPedia. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  11. ^ a b c "Mary B. Kenner Inventions, Patents and Patent Applications - Justia Patents Search". patents.justia.com. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  12. ^ Carter Sluby, Patricia. "African American Brilliance" (PDF). NCDCR. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2015.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Blashfield, Jean F. (1996) Women inventors. Minneapolis: Capstone Press. Vol. 4, pp. 11–16
  • Jeffrey, Laura S. (September 1, 2013) Amazing American Inventors of the 20th Century. Enslow Publishers, pp 29–35
  • Sluby, Patricia C. (2004) The Inventive Spirit of African Americans: Patented Ingenuity. Westport, Conn: Praeger, pp 147–150
  • Women Inventors. Women Inventors | NCpedia, 2011, www.ncpedia.org/industry/women-inventors.
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