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US Patent: 8,597X
Cook stove
Portable cooking stove
Patentee:
John Iggett (exact or similar names) - Albany, Albany County, NY

USPTO Classifications:
126/273R

Tool Categories:
household : stoves

Assignees:
None

Manufacturer:
Not known to have been produced

Witnesses:
Unknown

Patent Dates:
Granted: Jan. 16, 1835

Patent Pictures:
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Description:
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. Little is known about this patent. Only the patent drawing is available. This patent is in the database for reference only.

For a Portable Stove and Culinary Heater; John Iggett, Albany, Albany county, New York, January 16.

"The body of this stove is to be made of tin, or of sheet or cast iron, lined with tin. The furnace slides in under the bottom, and over this there is a flue running either way along the bottom of the oven, then up through vertical pipes near each end, into a flat flue between the top of the oven, and the top of the stove. Above the vertical pipes are openings for kettles, and the heated air may be carried off by a common pipe in the centre of the top. The oven, or body of the stove, may be closed by folding doors. Several variations, both in form and substance, are described, very much at length, and many things are claimed individually, after which comes the following general claim."

"And the said John Iggett further claims the application of the inverted basin, or heater, box grate, heat and conducting pipes, rotary shaft and shelves, movable top upon the heater, the division of the oven into different apartments, and all and singular the various modes of constructing the same hereinbefore described, either with a round, square, oval, oblong, any and every shape, box or stove, heater, tank, vessel of any and every description, whereby the operation and action of the heat is the same as hereinbefore described." This is sufficiently broad and sweeping; but it is one thing to make statements in a brief, and another to sustain them by testimony."

Description from the Journal of the Franklin Institute, V16, #2, Aug 1835, pg. 94.

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