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US Patent: 7,996X
Bee-Hive
Patentee:
Samuel Morrill (exact or similar names) - Dixfield, Oxford County, ME

USPTO Classifications:
449/3

Tool Categories:
agricultural : apiary apparatus
trade specific : beekeeper

Assignees:
None

Manufacturer:
Not known to have been produced

Witnesses:
John Otis
Simon Bogs

Patent Dates:
Granted: Feb. 04, 1834

Patent Pictures: [ 1 | 2 ]
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Description:
Listed in "A Digest of Patents, Issued by the United States, from 1790 to January 1, 1839", published in 1840, pg. 2.

Listed in "A List of Patents Issued by the United States, from 1790 to 1847", published in 1847, pg. 3.

Most of the patents prior to 1836 were lost in the Dec. 1836 fire. Only about 2,000 of the almost 10,000 documents were recovered. This is one of the recovered patents. This patent is in the database for reference only.

LETTERS PATENT:

The schedule referred to me in these Letters Patent and making part of the same, containing a description in the words of the said Samuel Morrill, himself of his improvement in the Bee Hive.

To all to whom these presents shall come:

Be it know that I, Samuel Morrill, of Dixfield in the county of Oxford and the State of Maine have invented a new and useful improvement in the Bee Hive and the following is a full and exact description of my said improvement.

I first procure a hive of common dimensions about a foot and a half high and about sixteen inches across the same. I prepare a wooden plate from half an inch to an inch thick of the full size of the inside of the hive so that it may keep in and be confined about five inches from the top of the hive. This plate is perforated with small holes to admit of the bees passing though the same.

I take, common glass tumblers and plant them inverted on the plate having first placed a thin piece of wood on the mouths of each tumbler, perforated with a hole sufficiently large to admit the bees. The hive is prepared with a lid inside on hinges and also sticks in the usual form to support the comb below the wooden plate.

This hive is represented in the drawing accompanying and making part of the description by Fig. 1. Fig. 2 represents the tumbler and the plate covering the mouth.

What I claim as new and of my invention is the use of these tumblers in which to receive the honey and the manner of preparing the partition plate.

Samuel Morrill

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