'Gideon Sundbäck' (
April 24,
1880 -
June 21,
1954) was a
Swedish-
American inventor. He made several advances in the development of the
zipper between
1906 and
1914, while working for companies that later evolved into
Talon, Inc. He built upon the previous work of other engineers such as
Elias Howe,
Max Wolff, and
Whitcomb Judson (whose daughter Sundback married). The name ''zipper'' was created by
B.F. Goodrich who used the device on their new
boots. Initially boots and
tobacco pouches were the primary use for zippers and it took another twenty years before they caught on in the
fashion industry. Gideon Sundback also invented the manufacturing machine for zippers. The zipper beat the button in 1937 for the usage of the "fly" in trousers.
Sundback is sometimes claimed as
Canadian, as his Lightning Fastener Company, an early manufacturer of the zipper, was based in
St. Catharines, Ontario. Although Sundback frequently visited the St. Catharines factory as president of the company, he was never, in fact, either a permanent resident or a citizen of Canada.