Alexander Miles
Alexander Miles (May 18, 1838 – May 7, 1918) was an African-American inventor was best known for being awarded as patent for an automatically opening and closing elevator doors. He was awarded the patent, U.S. Patent 371,207, on October 11, 1887.
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Alexander Miles (May 18, 1838 – May 7, 1918) was an African-American inventor was best known for being awarded as patent for an automatically opening and closing elevator doors. He was awarded the patent, U.S. Patent 371,207, on October 11, 1887.
Alexander Miles was probably born in Pickaway County near the town of Circleville, Ohio,[1] 1838[2] the son of Michael and Mary Miles.[3] Miles may have resided in the nearby town of Chillicothe, Ohio,[4] but subsequently moved to Waukesha, Wisconsin where he earned a living as a barber.[5] After a move to Winona, Minnesota, he met and married Mrs. Candace J. (Shedd) Dunlap, of La Porte, Indiana,[6] a widow with two children who was four years his senior and a native of New York.[7] Together they had a daughter, born in 1876, named Grace. Shortly after her birth, the family relocated to Duluth, Minnesota.[8]
The family moved to Montgomery, Alabama by 1889, where Miles was listed in the city directories as a laborer [9] However, by 1900, he listed himself as an insurance agent.[10] Around 1903, they moved again, to Seattle, Washington where he worked in a hotel as a barber
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