BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY
Alexander Miles
Alexander Miles (May 18, 1838 - May 7, 1918) was an African-American inventor who was best known for being awarded a patent for an automatically opening and closing elevator door design in 1887. He was awarded the patent, U.S. Patent 371,207, on October 11, 1887.
Alexander Miles was born in Ohio , probably in Pickaway County near the town of Circleville,[1] in 1838[2] the son of Michael and Mary (Pompey) 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 Chicago, Illinois 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.[11]
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