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Thomas Armat

 
Actor: Thomas Armat

Biography

Thomas Armat is the inventor of the Edison Vitascope, one of the first screen projectors. The Virginia-born Armat made his early living as a real estate agent and free-lance inventor. He is responsible for designing a new kind of oarlock for boats, an automatic car coupler for railroad cars and a number of other industrial machines. He and Charles Francis Jerkins began designing the first projection machine ever in 1894. Unfortunately, it was a bust. Still Armat kept tinkering and the following year had developed the device that was to become the Edison Vitascope. It differed from the earlier prototype in that it utilized a looping device and had an internal motion mechanism. He first called his revolutionary invention a Phantoscope and exhibited at the Cotton States Exposition in Atlanta. The next year Armat contracted with Edison to have his invention manufactured. Following the machine's debut on April 23, 1896, Lumitre debuted his similar Cinematographe in Paris. Armat was the projectionist who demonstrated it. Later Armat sued Edison and Biograph for breaching his patent rights, but in the end, they teamed up and formed the Motion Pictures Patent Company. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Thomas J. Armat
Born October 25, 1866(1866-10-25)
Fredericksburg, Virginia
Died September 30, 1948 (aged 81)
Washington, DC
Known for Vitascope

Thomas J. Armat (25 October 1866 – September 30, 1948) was an American mechanic and inventor, a pioneer of cinema best known through the co-invention of the Edison Vitascope.

Biography

Armat studied at the Mechanics Institute in Richmond, Virginia and then in 1894 at the Bliss School of Electricity in Washington, D.C., where he met Charles Francis Jenkins. The two classmates teamed up to develop a movie projector using a new kind of intermittent motion mechanism, a "beater mechanism" similar to the one patented 1893 by Georges Demenÿ in France. It was one of the first projectors using what is known as the Latham loop (an extra loop of the film before the transport mechanism to reduce the tension on the film and avoid film breakage, developed independently at the same time by Woodville Latham and his sons). They made their first public projection using their invention, named Phantascope after an earlier model designed by Jenkins alone, in September 1895 at the Cotton States Exposition in Atlanta.

Following this success, the two co-inventors broke up over patent issues. Jenkins tried to claim sole inventorship, but was turned down and sold out to Armat, who subsequently joined and sold the patent to Thomas Edison, who marketed the machine as the 'Vitascope'. The projector was used in a public screening in New York City beginning April 23, 1896 and lasting more than a week.

Working for Edison, Armat refined the projector in 1897 by replacing the beater mechanism with a more precise Geneva drive, duplicating an invention made a year earlier in Germany by Oskar Messter and Max Griewe and in England by Robert William Paul.

In 1947, Armat and William Nicholas Selig, Albert Edward Smith and George Kirke Spoor were awarded a Special Academy Award as representatives of the movie pioneers for their contributions to the film business.

He died on September 30, 1948.[1]

References

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