by Erin Doane, curator
There are so many little conveniences in life that we take for granted. Do you ever give much thought to the zipper? Just imagine how different your life would be without that fastener. Okay, so the difference would probably not be very dramatic – you would have to button your pants and lace your boots – but zippers are spectacularly useful things.
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Advertisement for “an interesting Exhibit of the Newest Fastening Device,” Elmira Star-Gazette, 1929 |
The ancestor of the modern zipper was developed in the mid-19th century. In 1851 Elias Howe, inventor of the sewing machine, patented an “Automatic, Continuous Clothing Closure.” Howe never tried to market or mass produce his invention but his sewing machine was a great success.![]() |
1851 patent for Howe’s Automatic Continuous Clothing Closure |
In 1893, Whitcomb Judson patented a “Clasp Locker” that was similar to Howe’s invention. It was a complicated hook-and-eye fastener used on shoes. Judson and businessman Lewis Walker created the Universal Fastener Company to manufacture Judson’s invention. They debuted the clasp locker at the 1893 World’s Fair. Judson continued to make improvements on his fastening device and received another patent for the “C-curity” fastener.![]() |
1893 patent for Judson’s Clasp Locker |
Gideon Sundback, an employee of the Universal Fastener Company, is credited with designing the modern zipper. He made improvements on Judson’s C-curity fastener and received a patent for the “Separable Fastener” in 1917.![]() |
1917 patent for Sundback’s Separable Fastener |
While the zipper as an object is a 19th century invention, the name zipper did not get applied to it until 1923. That year, the B.F. Goodrich Company started using Sundback’s fastener on its new rubber boots. They called the fastener the “zipper” and the name caught on. Boots and tobacco pouches were the first things on which zippers were widely used.![]() |
Goodrich Lo-Zipper advertisement, Elmira Star-Gazette, 1928 |
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Fire-resistant boot with zipper, late 20th century |
In the 1920s, manufacturers started putting zippers on clothing. One of its earliest uses was on leather jackets. The fastener was also especially popular on children’s clothing because it made it easier to dress squirming children and even let them dress themselves at a younger age. Today zippers are found on all types of products from clothing and shoes to housewares and camping items. What would we do without zippers? ![]() |
Clothing advertisement, Elmira Star-Gazette, 1929 |
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Child’s dress with zipper, 1955 |