'Peter Cooper' (
February 12,
1791 –
April 4,
1883) was an
American industrialist,
inventor,
philanthropist, and candidate for
President of the United States.
Biography
Cooper was born in
New York City, the son of
Dutch descendents. He had little formal schooling and worked in the family trade of
hatmaking. He then worked as a coachmaker's
apprentice,
cabinet maker,
grocer and was involved in the
manufacturing and selling of cloth-shearing machines. He designed and built the first locomotive in the United States, the
Tom Thumb.
In
2006, he was inducted into the
National Inventors Hall of Fame.
Industry

Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. Original Building
In about 1828, he started a successful glue and
isinglass factory, before building the
Canton Iron Works near
Baltimore in 1830. There he manufactured the first
steam powered
railroad locomotive made in
America, which was called ''
Tom Thumb''. The engine ran successfully on the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad on
August 28,
1830.
He then erected a rolling mill and an iron mill in
New York City, where he was the first to successfully use
anthracite coal to
puddle iron. In 1845, he moved his machinery to
Trenton, New Jersey where he built the largest rolling-mill in the
United States for producing railroad iron. There, in 1854 he oversaw the production of the first structural
wrought iron beams.
Politics
In 1840, he became an
alderman in New York City. As a prosperous businessman, he conceived of the idea of having a free institute in New York, similar to the
Polytechnic Institute in Paris. He erected a building and endowed art schools, spending between $600,000 and $700,000, for preparing young men and women of the working classes for business. In 1858 he presented the
Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art to the City of New York.

Engraving of Peter Cooper
In 1854, Cooper was one of five men who met at the house of
Cyrus West Field and formed the
New York, Newfoundland and London Telegraph Company. He was among those supervising the laying of the first
Transatlantic telegraph cable in 1858. He also patented the first gelatin dessert, which later became better known by the brand name
Jell-O.
Prior to the Civil War, Cooper was active in the
anti-slavery movement and promoted the application of Christian concepts to solve social injustice. He was a strong supporter of the
Union cause during the American Civil War and an advocate of the government issue of paper money.
Influenced by the writings of
Lydia Child, Cooper became involved in the Indian reform movement, organizing the privately funded
United States Indian Commission. This organization, whose members included
William E. Dodge and
Henry Ward Beecher, was dedicated to the protection and elevation of Native Americans in the United States and the elimination of warfare in the western territories. Cooper's efforts led to the formation of the Board of Indian Commissioners, which oversaw
Ulysses S. Grant's Peace Policy. Between 1870 and 1875, Cooper sponsored Indian delegations to Washington D.C., New York City, and other Eastern cities. These delegations met with Indian rights advocates and addressed the public on United States Indian policy. Speakers included:
Red Cloud,
Little Raven and
Alfred B. Meacham and a delegation of
Modoc and
Klamath Indians.
Presidential candidacy
Cooper was encouraged to run in the
1876 presidential election for the
Greenback Party without any hope of being elected. His running mate was
Samuel Fenton Cary. The campaign cost more than
$25,000.
The election was won by
Rutherford Birchard Hayes of the
Republican Party. Cooper was surpassed by another unsuccessful candidate:
Samuel Jones Tilden of the
Democratic Party.
Death
Peter Cooper died on
April 4,
1883. He is buried in
Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, NY.
Trivia
★ In 1845 Cooper was awarded a patent for a gelatin dessert. In 1897, Pearl B. Wait began marketing Jell-O.
★ In
1943, a United States
Liberty ship named the
SS ''Peter Cooper'' was launched. It was renamed the SS ''Samarkand'' after being loaned to the British. In 1971, the ship was scrapped.
★ His son,
Edward Cooper, was
Mayor of New York City from
1879 to
1880.
★ New York's
Peter Cooper Village was named in his honor.
★ Cooper learned finance under
Albert Gallatin, who was
Secretary of the Treasury from 1801-14. He was also Vice-President of the New York Board of Currency for a while. As a result, Cooper wrote much about financial topics. One of his more interesting assertions was in his 1883 book Ideas for a Science of Good Government, in which he claimed that the prime cause of the
American Revolution was Parliament's outlawing of the
Colonial Scrip currency in 1764, which caused an economic depression by outlawing the medium of exchange and created widespread dissatisfaction. Cooper writes:
''After Franklin had explained…to the British Government as the real cause of prosperity, they immediately passed laws, forbidding the payment of taxes in that money. This produced such great inconvenience and misery to the people, that it was the principal cause of the Revolution. A far greater reason for a general uprising, than the Tea and Stamp Act, was the taking away of the paper money.'' [1]
External links
★
Comprehensive Biography by Nathan C. Walker
★
Facts About Peter Cooper and The Cooper Union
★
Brief biography
★
Find-A-Grave profile for Peter Cooper
★
Ideas for a Science of Good Government Addresses, Letters and Articles by Peter Cooper
★
Extensive Information about Peter Cooper
★
Images of Peter Cooper's Autobiography
★
Peter Cooper's Dictated Autobiography
★
''The death of slavery'' by Peter Cooper at archive.org