L. Lewis Sagendorph

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L. Lewis Sagendorph
Born(1842-09-26)September 26, 1842
DiedApril 13, 1909(1909-04-13) (aged 66)
Occupation(s)Inventor, industrialist, businessman

L. Lewis Sagendorph (September 26, 1842 – April 13, 1909) was an American inventor and leading manufacturer of sheet metal products in the late 19th and very early 20th centuries. He founded what later became the Penn Metal Company in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Life and career[edit]

Longley Lewis Sagendorph, Jr. was born in Hudson, New York and later moved to Rhode Island where he served in the Civil War with Company K of the 10th Rhode Island Infantry Regiment.[1][2] After the war he moved to Staunton, Virginia and in 1869 started his manufacturing enterprise.[3]

Sagendorph moved his company to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1879 and founded the Sagendorph Iron Roofing and Corrugating Company in partnership with Major Harlan P. Lloyd.[4] The new company manufactured an array of sheet steel products.[5]

In 1889 he sold the company and moved to Philadelphia and started the Penn Metal Ceiling & Roofing Company.[2] Penn Metal began manufacturing corrugated iron and steel roofing, galvanized conductor pipe, pressed metal ceilings, heavy duty steel lockers, cabinets, shelving and corrugated metal pipe.

Sagendorph was an inventor as well as a manufacturer. From 1879 to 1905 he secured more than 100 U.S. and foreign patents for sheet metal manufacturing machinery such as roller dies, the sleeve die, automatic feeding mechanisms for press work, power squaring shears, toggle presses, machines for shearing and punching sheet steel, and the original method of corrugating sheets by means of rolls.[2]

At his death he was president of The Penn Metal Ceiling & Roofing Company of Philadelphia, The New York Iron Roofing & Corrugating Company of Jersey City, New Jersey, The American Metal Stamping Company and the Enameled Art Metal Company in Germantown, Pennsylvania.

After Sagendorph's death, in Philadelphia in 1909, his two eldest sons, George Adam Sagendorph and Frank Elijah Sagendorph 2nd continued to operate the company.[6] In later years the two brothers divided the company and changed the name to the Penn Metal Company, Inc., (Boston and Parkersburg, West Virginia) and the Penn Metal Corporation of Penna (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), which later also incorporated the trade name Penco.[7][8][9]

L. Lewis Sagendorph was buried at West Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Palliser, George (1978). The Palliser's Late Victorian Architecture: A Facsimile of George & Charles Palliser's Model Homes (1878) and American Cottage Homes (1878). Watkins Glen, NY: American Life Foundation. ASIN B000UE90T8.
  2. ^ a b c Cromley, Elizabeth C.; Hudgins, Carter L. (1995). Gender, Class, and Shelter. p. 155. ISBN 9780870498725. Retrieved October 1, 2015.
  3. ^ "145 Years of American Manufacturing: Penco Products Celebrates a Monumental Anniversary". July 28, 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  4. ^ Simpson, Pamela H. (1999). "Artful Interiors: Metal Ceilings and Walls" in Cheap, Quick, & Easy: Imitative Architectural Materials, 1870-1930. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. pp. 55–74. ISBN 9781572330375.
  5. ^ Crout, George C. The Economic Development of Middletown, Ohio 1796-1865.
  6. ^ Keator, Alfred Decker (1948). Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania Biography (PDF). Vol. XXVI. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc. p. 766.
  7. ^ Hale, Judson (1987). The Education of a Yankee, An American Memoir, Harper and Row. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc. ISBN 0060157526.
  8. ^ Jackson, Mike (2003). ""Main Street and Building Codes: The 'Tin Ceiling' Challenge" in APT Bulletin". XXXIV (4 ed.). Knoxville: The Journal Preservation Technology: 29–34. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ "Penn Metal Corporation of Penna, (Penco); Eightieth Birthday 1869 – 1949". Philadelphia. 1949.

Bibliography[edit]