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US Patent: D59,678
Design for an electric drill
Patentee:
Arno H. Petersen (exact or similar names) - Milwaukee, WI

USPTO Classifications:
D8/69

Tool Categories:
handheld power tools : handheld power drills

Assignees:
None

Manufacturer:
Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp. - Milwaukee, WI
A. H. Petersen Mfg. Co. - Milwaukee, WI

Witnesses:
R. Meissner
F. E. Dempsey

Patent Dates:
Applied: Jun. 24, 1921
Granted: Nov. 15, 1921

Patent Pictures:
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Report data errors or omissions to steward Jeff Joslin
Vintage Machinery entry for Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp.
Description:
This is the innovative Petersen "Hole Shooter" drill, introduced in 1922 in response to Henry Ford's request for a compact, light-weight and portable ¼" electric drill. The Hole Shooter, the first electric drill that could be held in one hand, weighed about 5 pounds and used a Westinghouse series-wound motor. A fire destroyed the A. H. Peterson Mfg. Co. plant and Petersen sold the rights to this drill to his business partner, A. F. Siebert, who then founded the Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp. in 1924 and then produced Milwaukee branded Hole Shooters. Nearly a century on, Milwaukee remains a major force in handheld power tools.

The US Patent Office Trademark serial number 136,911, filed 1920-09-07, was granted to A. H. Petersen Mfg. Co., Milwaukee, for the "HOLE SHOOTER" logo where the letters are made up of lots of little black circles.

In 1919, Herb Tautz (future founder of Delta Mfg. Co.) was a designer for A. H. Petersen Mfg. Co., so he likely had a hand in designing the Hole Shooter, although his name does not appear on the patent. By 1920 Tautz was working for Briggs & Stratton.

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