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US Patent: 279,781
Chain cutter
Patentee:
Frederick L. Magaw (exact or similar names) - Flatlands, NY

USPTO Classifications:
144/229, 83/661, 83/841

Tool Categories:
woodworking machines : machine and tool cutters : sawblades

Assignees:
Frederick L. Magaw - Flatlands, NY
John A. Peer - Grass Valley, CA
William C. Edes - Boston, MA

Manufacturer:
Not known to have been produced

Witnesses:
T. J. Keane
James R. Bowen

Patent Dates:
Applied: Oct. 27, 1882
Granted: Jun. 19, 1883

Patent Pictures:
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Report data errors or omissions to steward Jeff Joslin
Description:
This is the earliest patent we have seen for a chainsaw chain. See patent 279,780 for the machine that uses this chain. Judging by the description, the saw-teeth-on-a-chain was a new idea, at least in the context of cutting wood. The idea of saw-teeth-teeth-on-a-chain had been described in 1785 by Scottish surgeon John Aitken in his book "Principles of Midwifery, 2d Edition". Aitken's saw consisted of a length of toothed chain with wooden handles on either end. This saw was used during a difficult childbirth to cut the pubic symphysis, the cartilaginous joint between left and right pelvic bones. (Earlier surgeons had used a flexible knife but the symphisis was sometimes ossified, and the force required to force a knife through the bony cartilage risked damage to the bladder and other tissues in the area.) Aitken's idea was not merely hypothetical: such saws, using chains similar in scale to a pocket-watch chain, were commercially available. In the 1830s, Dr. Bernard Hein developed a hand-powered chainsaw device similar in mechanism to a hand drill, the "osteotome". While still hand-powered, this tool presaged the modern wood-cutting chainsaw.

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