Milestones in U.S. patenting

 

With intellectual property rights enshrined in the United States Constitution, the patent system is nearly as old as the nation itself. The U.S. government has granted millions of patents since 1790, and in recent years, the growth in patent applications has been exponential. Throughout the nation’s history, inventors, lawmakers, and government employees have worked to expand and advance the patent system. Today, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office grants patents in three categories utility , design , and plant.

To learn more about patents and the patent process visit our Patent Basics webpage.
 

Patent milestones

View the timeline below to learn about some of the significant patent milestones in the 1700s, 1800s, 1900s and 2000s.
 

1700s

1788

The United States Constitution was ratified on June 21. It includes what is now known as the intellectual property clause: Article I, Section 8, Clause 8, which reads “[The Congress shall have Power . . . ] To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”
 

1790

Congress passed the first patent statute in U.S. history on April 10. After the passage of the act, the first Patent Board, made up of Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of War Henry Knox, and Attorney General Edmund Randolph, began examining patents.
 

The first U.S. patent was granted to Samuel Hopkins for a process of making potash, an ingredient used in fertilizer on July 31. President George Washington signed the first patent.
 

1800s

1802

The Patent Office was established. On June 1, William Thornton was appointed as the first government employee to grant patents on a full-time basis. He was later given the title “Superintendent,” but he was not able to hire an assistant until 1810.
 

1836

The Patent Act of 1836 is signed into law on July 4. This law introduced a new patent numbering system, required the examination of patents prior to granting them, and established a corps of professional patent examiners to do so. One day later, Charles M. Keller becomes the first person to hold the official title of “patent examiner.”
 

U.S. patent no. 1 was granted to Senator John Ruggles for a traction wheel for steam locomotives on July 13. The 9,957 patents granted before the numbering system are now known as the X-patents.
 

On December 15, a catastrophic fire destroys the Patent Office, as well as many patent documents and models. An ongoing effort to recover the “X patents” lost in the fire continues to the present day.
 

1842

The first purpose-built Patent Office opened for business. This Washington, D.C. facility was also the first federally-funded museum collection in U.S. history, a premier tourist attraction where visitors from around the world could marvel at rows and rows of patent models representing the latest advances in technology.
 

The first U.S. design patent was granted by printer and industrialist George Bruce for a new typeface, or font. Design patents protect the way something looks rather than how it works.
 

1855

Clara Barton starts work as a clerk at the Patent Office. She is paid equal wages for her work, but faces discrimination from her male coworkers and eventually loses her job. She was later rehired during the Lincoln administration and goes on blaze trails as a relief worker during and after the Civil War.
 

1872

The Patent Office began publishing granted patents in the Official Gazette every Tuesday following their issuance.
 

1887

The United States joins the Paris Convention, an international treaty that strengthens and harmonizes the protection of patent holders around the world.
 

1900s

1911

On August 8, Utility Patent no. 1 million was granted to Francis H. Holton, for a tubeless vehicle tire.
 

1930

Congress passes the Plant Patent Act, creating a distinct type of patent to protect new varieties of certain plants. Plant patents continued to grow in popularity with horticulturalists throughout the 20th century, and today, the USPTO issues over 1,000 plant patents per year.
 

1931

Henry Rosenberg receives U.S. plant patent no. 1 for a climbing rose with ever-blooming properties that he called “The New Dawn.”
 

1952

The Patent Act of 1952 clarified and simplified existing patent law in the United States and removed redundancies. Patent laws and regulations are now known as Title 35 of United States Code.
 

1975

The Patent Office was renamed the Patent and Trademark Office by an act of Congress, effective as of January 2.
 

1991

On March 19, Utility Patent no. 5 million was granted to a team of inventors from the University of Florida for an innovative way to produce fuel ethanol.
 

2000s

2011

The America Invents Act was signed into law on September 16. Among the many provisions of the legislation was implementing the “first inventor to file” standard, bringing the U.S. patent system in line with other intellectual property offices around the world.
 

2018

On June 19, Utility Patent no. 10 million was granted by inventor Joseph Marron and patent assignee Raytheon Company for a “Coherent LADAR Using Intra-Pixel Quadrature Detection,’ which improves laser detection and ranging.
 

2021

Utility Patent no. 11 million was granted to 4C Medical Technologies, Inc. Co-inventors Saravana B. Kumar and Jason S. Diedering on May 11. This invention provides a new method for delivering, positioning, and/or repositioning a collapsible and expandable stent frame within a patient’s heart chamber.
 

2023

On September 26, Design Patent no. 1 million was granted to Agustina Huckaby of Fort Worth, Texas, for the ornamental design for a dispensing comb.