
ELIJAH J. MCCOY
Inventor (1844-1928)
Elijah McCoy was born in Colchester,
Ontario Canada on May 2, 1844, the son of former slaves who had fled from Kentucky before
the U.S. Civil War. Educated in Scotland as a mechanical engineer, Elijah McCoy
returned to the United States and settled in Detroit, Michigan. He began
experimenting with a cup that would regulate the flow of oil onto moving parts of
industrial machines. His first invention was a lubricator for steam engines, U.S. 129,843, which
issued on July 12, 1872. The invention allowed machines to remain in motion to be
oiled; his new oiling device revolutionized the industrial machine industry. Elijah
McCoy established his own firm and was responsible for a total of 57 patents.
The term "real McCoy" refers to
the oiling device used for industrial machinery. His contribution to the lubricating
device became so popular that people inspecting new equipment would ask is the device
"the real McCoy. This helped popularize the American expression, meaning the
real thing. His other inventions included an ironing board and lawn sprinkler. Elijah
McCoy died on October 10, 1929 after a year in the Eloise Infirmary in Eloise, Michigan,
suffering from senile dementia caused by hypertension. He was buried in Detroit,
Michigan.
Revised: July 18, 2013.