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Dakota Datebook
October 11, 2003
"Kodak from Nodak-David Houston"
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On October 11, 1881, a homesteader living in Hunter,
North Dakota, took out a patent for camera film that would forever change
the world of photography. The inventor, David Henderson Houston, was to
become a major player in the Kodak empire.
Houston, the son of a tenant farmer, was born on June
14th, 1841 in Auchterarder, Scotland, the same year his family emigrated
to the United States. David and two brothers were the only three out of
six children to survive infancy.
Houston turned out to be exceptionally inventive, and
when he was only 26 years old, he took out his first patent on a camera.
In 1879, Houston came to Dakota Territory looking for
land and bought 400 acres near Hunter, 30 miles northwest of Fargo. There,
he continued inventing and came up with an improved design for a disc
plow and also helped develop Blue Stem Seed Wheat. But his main interest
continued to be photography.
It was his business relationship with George Eastman
that encouraged Houston to further improve photography equipment. Eastman,
who was a high school dropout, had great vision. He bought 21 camera patents
from Houston, including the invention that made them famous a portable
camera. Up until then, people had to rely on professional photographers.
For this new hand-held camera, Eastman paid Houston $5000, as well as
monthly royalties for the rest of his life.
Houston then came up with another idea that would take
the portable camera to a new level. In 1881, he received patent #248,179
for Photographic Apparatus described as a camera whose inner end
has a receptacle containing a roll of sensitized paper or any other suitable
tissue, such as gelatine or any more durable material that may be discovered,
and an empty reel, upon which the sensitized band is wound as rapidly
as it has been acted upon by the light. Film on a roll.
By melding the portable camera with roll film, the first
Kodak camera was soon introduced with the slogan, "You Press the
Button, We Do the Rest." Interestingly, Houston is said to have come
up with the name Kodak by playing with an abbreviation of where he lived...
northern Dakota or Nodak. Eastman later stated, "I knew a trade name
must be short, vigorous, incapable of being misspelled to an extent that
will destroy its identity, and, in order to satisfy the trademark laws,
it must mean nothing."
The new camera, which sold for $25, made it possible
for any amateur to take good snapshots. It was small, lightweight and
came loaded with a roll of film long enough for 100 exposures. Once the
roll was used up, the entire camera would be sent in so that the film
could be processed and the camera reloaded with a new roll at a total
cost of $10; the lucrative business of film developing had begun.
Eastman Kodak flourished, and Houston died a rich man
May 6th, 1906. His house was later moved to Bonanzaville, in West Fargo,
where its available for tours.
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