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Tracy V. Wilson
This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
Mandy Woodruff Santos
This is Mandy Woodruff Santos from Brown Ambition. When you think about discovering small brands, what store pops into your mind? Well, it should be Walmart. Seriously, Walmart has thousands of small brands and they're all in one place. Just go online or in store, discover and shop. It could not be easier. Every one of these brands has a real story and real people behind it, but they're true American success stories and you can find them all at Walmart. Discover thousands of small brands@walmart.com today.
Ari Chambers
What's up, fam? It's sports journalist Ari Chambers.
Sam J.
Hey, what's up, y'?
Holly Frey
All?
Sam J.
It's your girl, Sam J.
Ari Chambers
And we're the hosts of Everyone Watches Women's Sports, a new podcast from 2gether.
Sam J.
We're breaking down the biggest headlines, the viral moments, and the stories everyone's talking about across women's sports.
Ari Chambers
From game changing performances to culture shifting conversations. We'll give you our takes, our debates, and a few laughs along the way.
Sam J.
Because everyone watches women's sports. Listen to everyone watches women's sports on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Ben Ndiff Afri
Thirty years ago, an island off Manhattan almost brought down New York City.
Tracy V. Wilson
Who will you trust? Your friends and neighbors? Who will you trust? The people five miles overseas.
Ben Ndiff Afri
This is a story about neighbors turning on each other and what happens when a forgotten place decides it's had enough.
Tracy V. Wilson
But we're not stopping, are we?
Ben Ndiff Afri
Listen to revisionist history. The Staten island problem on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Holly Frey
150 years ago, they were hunting us down to kill us. And now they're hunting down immigrants to deport them.
Tracy V. Wilson
This is First America, the true story of how the United States came to be and how we got to this present moment. Listen to First America on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Holly Frey
Welcome to Stuff youf Missed in History Class, a production of iHeartradio. Hello and welcome to the podcast. I'm Holly Fry.
Tracy V. Wilson
And I'm Tracy V. Wilson.
Holly Frey
And this is not the episode I set out to write.
Tracy V. Wilson
So funny.
Holly Frey
I was gonna do an episode on sneaker history. Listen, I probably still will. I still love shoes. But one of the things that I wanted to do in setting up that episode was to talk about Charles Goodyear, because his work really led to the development of the sneaker industry. Because they need those soles. Like, that's the distinguishing characteristic of sneakers. And he had come up on our episode on Raincoat History. But we didn't go very deep into his life story. And his work is really very important to a lot of the things that we have in the 21st century. It was, as I said, very pivotal to the development of the sneaker. But in the process of trying to give him some some time for a little mini biography at the front end of that episode, I just realized he had to end up being the whole episode because I was intrigued. Not in always a great way. I was also really frustrated. You're going to see you also will be frustrated with this man. Charles Goodyear is often described as a chemist. And I guess you could say that it doesn't seem quite accurate to me because he was not the kind of chemist who was seeking to understand molecular science. He wasn't developing formulas. We talked about so many people in that Raincoat episode who were also trying to figure these things out, like how to make a stable non sticky rubber. But they operated so differently from Goodyear because he was just kind of trying stuff out, seeing what worked, sometimes having an accident and going, can I replicate that? Which sometimes happens in science. But he really was kind of just like trying things in the lab. He was not like a heavy science dude. And spoiler alert. I feel like I should also tell people this is not the most upbeat story. There are some great moments where Goodyear gets really excited about his work. You too, will likely become frustrated with him in the course of this episode because he made a lot of really dodgy decisions. And those decisions often caused the people that he loved a whole lot of suffering in the process. So that's who we're talking about today.
Tracy V. Wilson
So Charles Goodyear was born on December 29, 1800, in New Haven, Connecticut, to Amasa Goodyear and Cynthia Bateman Goodyear. Goodyear's family traced all the way back to the founding of the New Haven colony. Amasa was a merchant and owned a hardware store. The family moved north to Naugatuck, Connecticut, when Charles was very young, and he spent his early life there.
Holly Frey
For some portion of his youth, Charles, who was deeply religious, considered a life in the clergy, although he did abandon that idea at 17, he moved to Philadelphia, and he lived there for four years, and he worked as an apprentice in another hardware store. And then at the end of that four years, when he returned home to Connecticut, he became business partners with his father, and their business became Amasa Goodyear and Son. The early work of this career that Charles Goodyear was doing with his father's company gave very little indication of the invention that would make Charles famous eventually. They were known for their metal goods that Amasa designed and manufactured, including everything from buttons to farm equipment. So I guess in terms of ingenuity and inventiveness, maybe it's a hint. A 1912 book titled Leading American Inventors claims that the good years were known especially for. For making really good forks.
Tracy V. Wilson
That cracks me up. Specifically forks.
Holly Frey
You want to know where to get the best fork in town?
Tracy V. Wilson
These guys. Good years. Several years into this work, Charles got married to a woman named Clarissa Beecher. This appears to have been a good match and a happy marriage, despite the two of them having to get through a lot of difficult times. They had seven children together.
Holly Frey
Yeah, and I actually should say I had written that note that Tracy just read about the number of children that there were a lot of children that Goodyear had and they didn't all live. And I actually had a hard time kind of untangling how many he had with Clarissa. There's also a second wife that's gonna come up later on. So the seven, take it with a grain of salt. Cause I'm not 100% the biography that I read that said 7. I did not untangle how they landed at that number. But they did have many kids together. But before they went through the tough times that Tracy just alluded to, there was actually a period of prosperity. Charles and Clarissa moved to Philadelphia in 1826 so that Charles could start his own hardware store. And initially they did really well. But Charles ran into financial problems. This will set the stage for his entire life story. He often sold things on credit, which a lot of merchants did. But it seems like he was not very good at collecting payments. He also gave credit to people who maybe didn't really have anything to back that up. And he soon found out that he could not keep up with his own debts and the business closed in 1830. This is one of those things that's a little bit weird because in a lot of write ups you will see about Good Year. They describe it as his father's business failing. And that confusion may come from the fact that much of the stock in Charles's store had actually come from his father. So there was a connection between the two stores. But it was Charles's own store that collapsed. According to that same 1912 book we just mentioned, Goodyear refused to declare bankruptcy because he knew it would lead to the seizure of all of his assets, including any intellectual property. And because he and his father had come up with A variety of metal things. He didn't want to lose his rights to those. And the consequence is that he apparently was in and out of debtors prison a lot throughout his whole life. I was not able to confirm this next bit to find hard documentation, although I did find a 1933 notice in the United States Gazette of Philadelphia that his home was being auctioned off by the sheriff's office, presumably as part of a default issue with a loan. For a while, the family was really scraping by. Clarissa was bringing in some money, looming linen. And Charles also notes in his own writing that there was a time during this period when their possessions were sold at auction to meet their rental costs. And this is something that would happen throughout his life.
Tracy V. Wilson
Goodyear later explained how he came to view rubber as a potential way out of his financial problems. He described in writing how he visited the Roxbury India Rubber Company in New York to purchase a life preserver. But when he examined it, he thought the rubber tube that was used to inflate it could be improved. So he went home and he worked on a new tube, and then he brought that to the showroom. The person he spoke with thought that the new tube was indeed an improvement and that Goodyear might be able to solve another bigger problem. He told Goodyear that he should work on improving India rubber and that if he could, he would make a lot of money. He also mentioned that a lot of other people had tried and failed and lost a lot of money in the process.
Holly Frey
And Goodyear later wrote of this moment when he had this conversation in the third person, stating, quote, he was not before aware that the manufacture was so imperfectly understood. He was blessed with ignorance of the obstacles which he had subsequently to encounter, but soon learned this much at least that the difficulties which attended experiments with the substance, if not unparalleled, were of an uncommon character from the fact that the experimenter, as well as the manufacturer was obliged to wait the return of both warm and cold weather to at least 12 months, and often longer, before he could know with any certainty that his articles would not decompose or what were the results of his labors. So, yes, there was this huge opportunity to turn his finances around, but it was also going to require a significant investment of time before any benefit would even be possible. But Charles Goodyear also realized that that which is hidden and unknown and cannot be discovered by scientific research was will most likely be discovered by accident, if at all, and by the man who applies himself most perseveringly to the subject and is most observing of everything relating thereto basically like, okay, science people can't do it, but I'm just gonna keep trying. So he took on this challenge, and the biggest initial challenge with India rubber was heat.
Tracy V. Wilson
So natural rubber, which was called India rubber, had a lot of problems and practical applications, like indigenous people who live in places where these plants grow have been using natural rubber for millennia. But when we're talking about, like, manufactured products, there were issues. It could waterproof things, but it also melted when it got hot, and it would stick to other things, potentially making a huge mess. When it melted, it would lose its shape and it didn't snap back. In environments that were hotter than 100 degrees Fahrenheit, rubber quickly broke down completely, and it also cracked in the the cold. So something that was coated with it for waterproofing would no longer be waterproof if it got too cold. Problems with snow boots, for example, have cracked rubber and wet feet. So if you had something coated in India rubber, it had to have this ongoing upkeep and reapplication to try to retain the benefits of the rubber coating.
Holly Frey
Yeah. And as Tracy said, indigenous people used it, but they kind of understood this, and it was part of their annual cycles to maintain their stuff with it, Whereas to make things for manufacturing, nobody wanted to buy into a thing that
Tracy V. Wilson
needed to be retailed. That's not what a consumer product is about.
Holly Frey
We are going to talk about what Charles Goodyear did right in his early years of experimenting after we pause for a sponsor break. The start of Goodyear's success with Rubber was in 1835, when he figured out how to manufacture gum. Elastic. That's just another name for natural rubber. India rubber into sheets. He added magnesium to gum rubber at a one to one ratio, then added turpentine to liquefy it. And then he spread that out onto marble with a rolling pin. One account said he borrowed his wife's rolling pin for the first batch. I don't know if that's true. Then, according to his own account, he also commenced the art of embossing on glazed cane bricks. And he used these sheets of rubber fabric to start making shoes. And these were to be used for testing. These were not shoes that were going right to consumers. And that's good because they, like other rubber products, melted and stuck together in warm temperatures. He eventually arrived at, quote, boiling the articles compounded with magnesia in quicklime and water, which appeared to have the effect of tanning the gum and destroying its viscous property. So he thought he had managed to solve that melting problem.
Tracy V. Wilson
By the end of 1835, newspapers ran this story, quote, a discovery has been recently made by Mr. Charles Goodyear by which India rubber, after having been dissolved, can be restored by a cheap process to its original whiteness. And the pure gum be formed into a fabric that can be used instead of cloth, leather or parchment, and can be molded into almost any form, and can also be combined in a variety of ways with cloth, cordage and leather. Goodyear won medals from the Mechanics Institute and the American Institute that year for his rubber sheets.
Holly Frey
But if those sheets were washed with anything acidic, like even if someone put a little lemon juice in water to wipe them down, the lime in them was neutralized and they became sticky again. So in 1836, he was back at work trying to figure out improvements, and the solution was a little bit of an accident. He had tried a number of things which were not working, and then one day he boiled a piece of his rubber fabric in lime with liquid bronze, like the metal bronze. And he was trying to coat this thing, but it didn't coat the entire fabric in metal as he had hoped. Some of it stuck, but some of it had just slid off. And so then he tried to get the bronze that had adhered to the fabric off using nitric acid, but that just made this ugly mess. There was discoloration. And he threw that sample out, thinking that whole plan was trashed. But then a few days later, he pulled it out of the garbage and examined it, and he found that while it was still pliant in the areas where he had used nitric acid, it wasn't sticky at all. He recreated this accidental treatment with good results. And then he developed a process for it which he called the acid gas process. And he patented his new rubber sheets that were made this way. He also designed a number of products using the sheets, and he was soon manufacturing those things, thanks to a friend, William Ballard, who was willing to invest in Charles Goodyear. Feel like he's the first of many friends who foolishly invested in Charles Goodyear.
Tracy V. Wilson
In fact, all of his work had been possible due to Goodyear's friends being really generous with him, from loaning him workspace to actually giving him money. And it soured some of those friendships as Goodyear worked through multiple expensive failures. But Goodyear and Ballard also failed. And this time it was by no fault of Goodyear. Ballard ran into his own financial hardships in the events that led up to the panic of 1837, and he declared bankruptcy. The company folded through all of his
Holly Frey
ups and Downs Good Year remained fairly upbeat, and he even made fun of himself. He included an anecdote in his writing about the development of rubber that he wrote decades later about how he was always wearing things that were made from rubber sheeting. These were often made by his wife, Clarissa. This was in part to show what it could do and also because they didn't have other things to make clothes out of. And when someone asked one of his friends how he would recognize Charles Goodyear if he met him, the reply was, quote, if you meet a man who has on an India rubber stock coat, vest and shoes with an India rubber money purse without a cent of money in it, that is he.
Tracy V. Wilson
Goodyear continued on his own, making rubber shoes and housewares as almost a cottage industry. But he wasn't able to sell much. One of the problems was that rubber had developed a bad reputation. As Goodyear and other innovators had put rubber items to market in 1835 and 1836, a rubber craze had driven a lot of people to purchase rubberized items, only to discover that those items had problems. So people were not as keen to buy stuff made out of rubber. And retailers were also not that interested in stocking rubber products, honestly. Understandably, Goodyear regrouped, moved the family back to New Haven, Connecticut, where they lived with his parents. And he focused exclusively on waterproof shoes. And he actually did okay for a while. He wasn't flush with cash, but he was able to support his family.
Holly Frey
Goodyear also met another man who worked in rubber named Nathaniel Hayward during this period. And Hayward had figured out a method of combining India rubber with sulfur and curing it in the sun. And the result was a non sticky rubber. Goodyear purchased Hayward's patent in 1839, and he also hired Hayward to work with him. Hayward became his assistant. The sulfur treated rubber had the complete nonstick finish that Goodyear was after, but it came with other problems. He started making all kinds of things with this sun cured sulfur method. And he got a massive and important order when the U.S. postal Service commissioned him to make mailbags. And he made those bags and they turned out really, really well. He had treated them with chrome, lead and vermilion to make a faux leather finish. This was something he was experimenting with a lot at the time. And in his writing he stated, quote, being desirous to beautify the fabrics with a variety of colors. The writer used metallic and other colors indiscriminately for this purpose. He treated the mailbags and then he hung them in his workshop while he went away on vacation, and when he got home, those bags were in piles on the floor. The material was breaking down, and it also smelled horrible. The rubber was rotting.
Tracy V. Wilson
He had not just been making the mailbags this way. He'd also made home goods and life preservers, and they had been selling. And he had also been crowing to all of his friends about his big government contract. And now people's stuff was falling apart. He had a lot of angry consumers and no mailbags to deliver. On that contract, he wrote, quote, again, he saw those dear to him together with his aged parents, stripped of the comforts with which they were surrounded. Everything that he possessed was brought to the hammer for the discharge of private bills. Goodyear described this as a time of serious misfortune in his life. He was completely broke. He knew that he had alienated people, describing himself as, quote, being justly debarred the sympathy of others. A lot of people told him that he should give up on rubber and go back to the hardware business.
Holly Frey
He did not do that. Instead, he tried to figure out exactly what had gone wrong with the process, and he believed it was the colorants. His process had been working perfectly on sheets of rubber. But these mailbags and other new products that had failed were thicker. And it seemed that the sun curing process just couldn't reach the deeper layers of thicker items. So they weren't curing all the way through. But though this whole ordeal would probably destroy most people, and he did seem to have been in a downward spiral briefly, he bounced back kind of quickly when something else caught his attention. He wrote that he, quote, had hardly time enough to realize the extent of his embarrassment before he became intently engaged with another experiment and his mind buoyant with new hopes and expectations, which, as it afterwards proved, were to be, for the time at least, more than realized.
Tracy V. Wilson
In our episode about the invention of the raincoat, we mentioned that it's often said that the discovery of vulcanization was kind of an accident. And that's true, although not in quite the way that we said in that episode. That was sort of a brief mention. It didn't get the kind of deeper dive that today's episode is getting. So we know now how things played out, at least according to Goodyear's account. He stated that he was visiting a factory in Wooburn and he brought a sample of some of the compound that had failed in the mailbags. According to him, the sample, quote, being carelessly brought in contact with a hot stove, charred like leather so it didn't melt. Goodyear Described calling out to his brother and some of the other people around to point out how interesting this was. But it sounds like they had kind of had enough of him to getting excited about things and then having them fall apart. So nobody really paid much attention.
Holly Frey
But Goodyear really felt like he had identified something important. His accident made him believe that high temperature applied to a treated piece of rubber cloth could potentially remove all of its stickiness if he could just get the temperature and the exposure to it right. So he started a series of experiments. He found that if he heated sulfur to boiling, which is like hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of degrees that you have to reach, he could put India rubber in it and the rubber would not melt and it would emerge intact, soft and pliable. He also tried exposing treated fabric to fire and found that it did not melt, but it charred, as it had done in his accident at the factory. Once he had proof of concept, he was all in on his new process, and he spent some several months testing it. He tested a variety of different heat sources, and as he refined, he ran processes over and over to ensure the results were consistent. The rubber he produced did not break down in high temperatures. And as for cold, one of his daughters described seeing him nail a piece of his treated rubber outside one evening before a cold night, and then retrieved it in the morning. And he was elated to find that it was still flexible and it had not cracked. So he had figured out vulcanization. He also gave the process that name after the Roman God of fire.
Tracy V. Wilson
So at this point, after all of that, this was a thoroughly tested process that addressed the problems that everybody was having with the production of rubber. And it addressed all of the problems that Goodyear had had with his own mailbags and other products. But just as his brother and colleagues had really not wanted to hear it, when Charles noticed his sample not melting in that earlier incident, the consumer market was really not interested. In vulcanized rubber. In addition to the problems with reliability of rubber products in general, Goodyear's failures were well known. On top of those two problems, the idea of homeware goods was seen as a novelty. He needed to produce something bigger if he was going to really get a large scale buy in from a company or a government contract. And then there was the really big obstacle. All of the items he had vulcanized were processed in very small setups in Goodyear's home or in workshops where he was borrowing time. He just couldn't produce anything at scale to show that he had really figured things out.
Holly Frey
This time, the rest of Goodyear's life was like an unending roller coaster ride, and not in a good way. We'll get into it after we hear from the sponsors that keep the show going.
Jacob Goldstein
This is Jacob Goldstein from what's yous Problem? You probably think of Walmart as the store that carries just about everything under the sun and maybe not as the place to discover small brands. Well, two things can be true at the same time, because Walmart is home to thousands of small brands founded by people who had an idea, took a chance, and built something of their own. Behind everyone is a real story and a lot of hard work. So why not take a little time to recognize all the people building small brands across the country and support everything they're creating? Walmart is proud to give those brands a place on its shelves and online. It's never been easier to find and support small brands. So take a look at Walmart. You might come across something new, something unexpected, or a brand whose story speaks to you. You never know what you're missing until you look Discover thousands of small brands@walmart.com what's up, fam?
Ari Chambers
I'm sports journalist Ari Chambers.
Sam J.
Hey, what's up, y'?
Tracy V. Wilson
All?
Sam J.
It's your girl, Sam J.
Ari Chambers
And we're the host of Everyone Watches Women's Sports, a new podcast from Together and I heart women's sports because, let's
Sam J.
be real, women's sports is giving us way too much to talk about these days.
Ari Chambers
The highlights, the rivalries, the breakout stars, the moments that take over your entire
Sam J.
timeline and the conversations that start during the game and somehow keep going all week.
Ari Chambers
Every week, we're breaking down the biggest stories across women's sports.
Sam J.
We'll give you our takes, our debates, and probably a few disagreements.
Ari Chambers
We'll talk to athletes, celebrate big moments, and get into what's happening on and off the field, court, track and beyond.
Sam J.
Because we're not just interested in what happened, we're interested in why everyone's talking about it. Because everyone watches women's sports. So if you're already a fan or
Ari Chambers
you're just getting into the game, there's a seat for you right here.
Sam J.
Listen to Everyone Watches Women's Sports on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Tracy V. Wilson
My first guest is Paris Hilton, Shakira,
Holly Frey
Luke and Yerin Samira E. Gracie. I'm so excited. On a bouncy bed, you have surprises, many surprises. Welcome to Suite 305 where the group chat comes to life.
Ben Ndiff Afri
What up?
Tracy V. Wilson
Hola, amiga.
Sam J.
Hola, mejor. Amiga.
Mandy Woodruff Santos
Hola.
Ari Chambers
Yes.
Holly Frey
You're the only person I know that loves a yellow Starburst. It's lemonade.
Tracy V. Wilson
This is suite 305.
Holly Frey
Listen to suite 305 with Lele Pons as part of my Cultura Podcast network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or
Tracy V. Wilson
wherever you get your podcast.
Ben Ndiff Afri
Thirty years ago, an island off Manhattan almost brought down New York City.
Tracy V. Wilson
Who will you trust? Your friends and neighbors? Who will you trust? The people five miles overseas.
Ben Ndiff Afri
This is a story about neighbors turning on each other and what happens when a forgotten place decides it's had enough.
Tracy V. Wilson
We reached for a feeling that exists in in this city, but we're not stopping, are we?
Ben Ndiff Afri
I'm Ben Ndiff, afri, and for my new series on Revisionist History, I took a deep dive into Staten Island's attempt to secede from New York city in the 1990s and what it all has to do with the politics of resentment that dominate America today. Listen to revisionist history, the Staten island problem, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Holly Frey
During this time in Charles Goodyear's life, when he was perfecting vulcanization, his family was really struggling. In the winter of 1839-1840, there was a very heavy snowstorm and. And the good years were trapped in their home with no fuel to warm it and no food to eat. And remember, he had quite a few kids. Charles said that he was sick, but that he walked through the storm to the house of a man named Obi Coolidge looking for help. This was a person who's kind of like a neighbor. They had said hi on the street once or twice, but they didn't really know each other. And according to Goodyear, he explained to Coolidge the situation he was in, including the work he had been doing in the previous years. And Coolidge not only gave him help with the family's immediate needs to get them warmed and fed, he also backed Goodyear financially for continued work, giving him additional funds to sustain his efforts.
Tracy V. Wilson
Goodyear was working at the time to create what he described as, quote, a set of military equipments for specimens with the intention of vulcanizing them as soon as an apparatus could be obtained for the purpose. But once again, his luck tanked, because before he could vulcanize these items, the rubber fermented and they fell apart. He had lost an entire winter's worth of work. He chalked the experience up to a learning opportunity, recognizing that he could not mix natural rubber with a solvent and then compound it with lead and sulfur unless he was ready to vulcanize that right away.
Holly Frey
Finally, there was a potential breakthrough, but it wasn't in the way that Goodyear anticipated. He was approached by a French firm called Ratier and Guibal to license his acid gas process. But he didn't want to give it to them because he felt like he was so close to large scale vulcanization and that it would be a far better process for them to license. This is really frustrating to read about because he continued to put his family in peril by saying, no, no, just wait a little long. When his two year old son was dangerously ill because he had not taken this contract, Goodyear wrote to a friend for help and he got back $7 and a letter chastising him for not taking some sort of stable work to support his family.
Tracy V. Wilson
With money borrowed from relatives, Goodyear took some of his small home vulcanized items to New York and then once again got funding, this time from a man named William Ryder. This enabled Goodyear to set up a large scale facility in Springfield, Massachusetts. And he started to gain some momentum. He started getting orders for goods and he was getting the business in decent shape when he got hit with another bit of bad fortune. He landed in debtors jail again. He was $35,000 in the hole and people were filing claims against him. But this time he took the option of declaring bankruptcy to get out of that situation. Even so, once he was free from prison, he continued to work until the debts he had were all paid off. Shockingly, that only took a few months.
Holly Frey
Yeah, that French company and others did start to get license deals with him and that helped him really get to a much more stable financial footing. For a while. The 1840s started with great promise. Although Goodyear was not entirely satisfied with the vulcanization process when it came to fabric, which was really one of the big applications of it. And the problem was that the fabrics that Goodyear was adhering his vulcanized rubber to just didn't always stay adhered. He tried a lot of different kinds of fabrics and they all had this problem. He spent a lot of time, years solving this problem. And it ultimately saw Goodyear abandoning this idea of adhering the rubber to fabric and instead directly mixing cotton fibers into his India rubber in its liquid form before he laid it out flat and vulcanized it. And this basically created an entirely new fabric.
Tracy V. Wilson
Additionally, Goodyear did not really want to run a factory he was intent on licenses serving as his income. But he took kind of a weird path to try to get there because he kept Inventing uses for vulcanized rubber and then building prototypes. Not to put these items into production just to show that this could be done. This was a very expensive way to do business. And he had taken so much time trying to perfect things that other chemists were now able to develop their own processes before he finally got a patent for vulcanization in 1844. That led to legal issues down the road.
Holly Frey
Yeah, we will talk about another patent holder in just a moment. His next goal was to showcase his inventions at world expositions. He spent years preparing to exhibit at the 1851 Great Exhibition in London, where he showed off vulcanization at frequent flyer on our show, the Crystal Palace. He won a medal for his efforts. People really did recognize he had figured out a pretty cool thing. But even as he was still celebrating his triumph, he found himself embroiled in one legal battle after another. In 1852, he sued Horace Day for patent infringement, and he actually hired Daniel Webster to represent him. That was apparently very expensive. I saw one thing that claimed that he paid Daniel Webster $10,000 for that. In 1851, he did win the suit, and he celebrated by taking the entire family to Europe.
Tracy V. Wilson
There was some business at hand on that trip. Charles McIntosh, the inventor of the raincoat, had a business partner named Thomas Hancock. Hancock had patented his method for vulcanization, which also used sulfur, in Britain at the same time that Goodyear was getting his patent. Goodyear, no doubt feeling confident after the whole horus day verdict, intended to sue on the grounds that Hancock had copied him. McIntosh, undoubtedly wanting to keep his company out of any kind of legal mess, tried to smooth things over and offered to give Goodyear one half of the patent that Hancock held if Charles would just drop his legal action. Goodyear refused, and later he must have regretted this because he lost his case. He could have had half of the British rights, but then he returned home with nothing other than a big legal bill.
Holly Frey
Yeah, there are many versions of the Goodyear story that kind of tell his life story in parallel to Hancock. And there is the possibility that Hancock had gotten. There's like an apocryphal story that he got a piece of rubber that Goodyear had worked on and he smelled sulfur on it.
Mandy Woodruff Santos
It.
Holly Frey
And that led him to his version, but we don't know that for sure. But Goodyear made one bad decision after another, including going, no, no, I don't need all the money that you're gonna make. That's fine. I'll make it all. And he didn't make any. The bad luck also continued Clarissa, Goodyear's wife of almost 30 years at that point, died in March of 1853. He did remarry a year later to a woman from London named Fanny Wardell. In the months after Clarissa's death, Goodyear wrote and published his own account of his life and work, titled Gum Elastic and Its Varieties, with a detailed account of its applications and uses and of the discovery of vulcanization.
Tracy V. Wilson
This book definitely reads as though one of its goals is to establish Goodyear as the inventor of vulcanized rubber. He opens the book, which is more than 500 pages long, with the quote, the writer finds himself so identified with the subject that he deems it impossible to give a correct history of the recent inventions in gum elastic without alluding to himself oftener than he could wish, by speaking of the trials and discouragements which he had to encounter during the first seven years of his experiments.
Holly Frey
In this writing, Goodyear goes right to the basics. He talks about the ficus elastica and the Western world's access to it. That's the the tree that it comes from, noting that while it grows in numerous regions, its accessibility and cheaper cost in India at the time resulted in most of it being sourced from there. And he describes the process of getting the milky rubbery koutchuk from the plant and processing it for use in various forms that happened from the 1700s on. He compares it and its uses to other substances like bitumen and gutta percha.
Tracy V. Wilson
He walks the reader through the problems of early rubber, which he calls gum or gum elastic. Quote. In the early attempts to manufacture the gum in the United States, it was found that no kind except that which had been cured could be manufactured in any way into goods that would not in a very short time decompose. He noted that the way India prepped it for export was part of the problem, and he hoped that they would shift their methods as the global rubber industry grew and more started making their own rubber supply available.
Holly Frey
He also recognizes in this writing that due to his own advancements as well as those of others, the applications that were making use of rubber were rapidly expanding. He wrote about this in a way which evidences racist bias as well. He wrote, quote, the certainty that there will in future be a very great consumption of the various kinds of India rubber and waterproof gums has caused a good deal of apprehension with many as to the supply. And it is asked, where is it to come from? Will there not be a scarcity? It is true that owing to the sudden and rapid extension of the manufacture, together with some commercial speculation, in the article, the price has for the present year 1851, been unusually high. So he started writing this a couple years before it came out, apparently. But this is a state of things which will not continue. The supply is literally inexhaustible. There is a belt of forest trees extending 10 degr each side of the equator around the globe which yield these gums of various kinds. And has been the case with turpentine and resin. The greater the demand, the cheaper in all probability these substances will be. When, once the attention of mankind is turned to the subject and that which is already being done, enterprising civilized races engage in the business of collecting it. Instead of relying on one tribe of Indians on a single river, there will no longer be any solicitude on the score of supply.
Tracy V. Wilson
The year after his second wedding, Goodyear was back in Europe for another world's fair, the Exposition Universelle of Paris of 1855. He spent a lot of money on this effort, a reported $50,000. He spent so much money over the course of the fair while he was in France, he once ran into money issues and ended up in a French debtor's prison. It's sometimes reported that he received the French Legion of Honor medal while in prison, but Holly could not find him in the Legion of Honor registry.
Holly Frey
Nope. Once he was released from debtors prison in France, Goodyear, who had a long history of dyspepsia, was quite sick. He's often described as having a variety of ailments, but what they are is a little bit unclear. But he was sick enough at this point that he thought he was dying. And he actually sent letters to his friends and family saying so and basically telling them goodbye. He and Fanny traveled from France to Bath, England, and he stayed there until 1858. So several years as his wife took care of him. He returned to the US in May 1858, having pawned his wife's jewelry to pay for that voyage. His business was a mess, but he was able to get his patent extended for seven years, and that offered a fairly decent income. Goodyear used the money he was bringing in to set up a new home in Washington D.C. in 1860, he learned
Tracy V. Wilson
that his daughter Cynthia was dying in Connecticut, and he immediately set off by steamer to see her, leaving Fanny and their five day old new daughter at home. When this ship docked in New York, Goodyear was exhausted from days of seasickness and he was also met with the news that Cynthia had already died. Goodyear was so stricken that he could not continue on to Connecticut, and he was taken to the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Fannie hurried to meet him there after being notified that he was on his deathbed. He lived for several weeks after this and died on July 1 at the age of 59.
Holly Frey
Goodyear, unsurprisingly, left a massive debt behind, totaling right around $200,000. His son, Charles Jr. Much better with money than his father, settled his outstanding debts and using the remaining money due through patent licensing, was able to set up a fund to take care of Goodyear's remaining dependent family. When the patents expired in 1865, Charles Jr. Sold the rights to the Goodyear name.
Tracy V. Wilson
Charles Goodyear's life was so full of ups and downs, and he was obviously a driven man and even a visionary of sorts of but the task of managing businesses related to his ideas was something he never got the hang of. He wrote of the hardship of being an inventor. In this way he takes the precaution to procure letters patent for his invention, which he counts as property, but which amounts chiefly to this, that the government grants him permission to fight his own battles. Next comes the Herculean task of convincing the public of the advantages of the improvement, and yet the more difficult one of supplying the market with the improvement himself and of preventing others from doing it by encroaching on his patent. If his object is to derive a profit by disposing of his patents for his inventions. It is well known that patents are so commonly evaded in some way and that the patent law is so ineffectual for their protection that the public will not value them highly, if at all.
Holly Frey
Incidentally, if you're thinking, yeah, but there's a Goodyear company that still exists today that was not started by Charles Goodyear or any of his descendants, although the name is inspired by his work. That company was founded in 1898, so almost 40 years after Charles Goodyear died by a man named Frank Sieberling.
Tracy V. Wilson
Okay, did not know that.
Holly Frey
Me either until I was working on this.
Tracy V. Wilson
Do you have some listener mail?
Holly Frey
I do. I have so many thoughts about Charles Goodyear. Can't wait for Friday. I have listener mail from Teresa. Or Teresa, who writes, hello, ladies. I just finished your episode on the Uffizi Gallery and it had everything international travel, art history, restoration, Michael Kimmelman quotes labor protests. What prompted me to write was the date of the event. An event that happened in my own lifetime. Always makes me feel old, sure, but also brings me back to some questions I liked discussing with my high school students when I used to teach the history unit for a class called Theory of Knowledge. When does an event become history versus current events? What is worth preserving, whether physically or through story? Is the passage of time helpful or detrimental for creating a more accurate understanding of the past? Theory of Knowledge is a required course for kids in the International Baccalaureate program, IB for short. And for a student in IB to write a history essay, they are required to write on something at least 10 years in the past. The election of 2016 could now be considered history. As if the 1990s being history isn't weird enough. I would love to hear your discussion on this. I no longer teach, but work in education policy trying to make teaching better for teachers. I appreciate every single time you give a shout out to the teachers on your show. This episode had that too. I'll do it again. Thank you educators. Since I've included pet tax in previous emails and I know you like art, Attached are some of my artworks featuring my pets. Raku, the Great Pyrenees border Collie mix, Ruby the Super Mutt are in the paper cut out Christmas card, and Treyla, the very cute but often evil elder cat in the form of a felted toy partially made with her actual fur. Thank you for all your work and amazing stories you share with us every week. I love this email because it brings up a thing that we talk about on the show sometimes.
Tracy V. Wilson
Yeah.
Holly Frey
But we haven't in a minute and I think it's worth looking at. We don't have a hard rule. We have rule ish. Kind of like usually we don't do stuff that's like after, I don't know, 60s, 70s usually.
Tracy V. Wilson
Yeah. Occasionally we've done something that's been more into the 80s, usually something that was not such big news in the 80s that our listeners of a comparable age to us would have huge memories of it. So the bombing part of the Uffizi episode was like more recent than we typically talk about.
Holly Frey
Yeah. And the logic for me of that and what often happens in anything that we end up talking about that is more like 80s or in this case 90s, is that it ties to something much older. Yeah. And so for me, I talked about at the beginning of that episode that what got me was that picture of the. Or not that picture, that impression left by a window that they leave in one of the vaulted ceilings in the Uffizi. But it really, like what got me really excited was looking at how they're trying to preserve history that was lost.
Tracy V. Wilson
Right.
Holly Frey
And so that gave us an opportunity to talk about art, which I always wanna do. And Bartolomeo Manfredi and like a little Caravaggio in there, which is also something I love talking about. So it's kind of like a through line that brings us to that moment in the 90s, which is very pivotal to the story in that, you know, I tried to give as much information as possible within the confines of our show.
Tracy V. Wilson
Right.
Holly Frey
But it has to connect usually to something that happened much earlier than that for us to walk you through those decades.
Tracy V. Wilson
Yeah, there's not a, like, there's not a hard and fast rule of when something becomes history. I'm a big fan of the Ask Historians subreddit, which is the one of the best moderated communities on Reddit. If you're like, ah, Reddit, they, their mods are on top of it and they have rules about what is appropriate to both post and comment. And I, if I'm remembering correctly, their rule is a 20 year rule because that is sort of what they have come to feel like is an appropriate amount. Like you've have enough remove from the thing happening after 20 years to look back on it and you could make arguments for amounts of time longer or shorter than that, but that's sort of where they have arrived. And that has also meant that when a 20th anniversary of BIG, big things are coming up, they have to kind of like brace for all of the questions about that thing that are likely to happen.
Holly Frey
Yeah. So, yeah, I mean we take it on a case by case basis and there are times where we'll check in with each other and go, this is going to get into recent stuff. Do you think that's okay? Just as like a gut check.
Tracy V. Wilson
Right.
Holly Frey
I have also heard, I feel like I had a professor in college who said that their rule of thumb is it's history if it's the previous generation's thing. Like you may have lived through part of it, but like if it was really a thing that impacted your parents, you could consider that history. And that's the thing. There's no rule, not just for us, but I don't think anywhere you can't, you can make guidelines.
Tracy V. Wilson
Right. We talked about it a little bit in the, when we did the episodes about the Vietnam draft board raids. When we started working on this episode, I or not this episode, this podcast, when we joined as hosts, the Vietnam War felt too recent to me. But that was now more than 10 years ago and we are farther from that now. So that felt less, less too recent for me. I have other reasons.
Holly Frey
Yeah, we're getting close to 15 years ago.
Tracy V. Wilson
Yeah, that's True.
Holly Frey
A long time.
Tracy V. Wilson
I think we're at 13 right now, at least from when I. When I came on.
Holly Frey
Oh, yeah.
Tracy V. Wilson
Cause you came on a little earlier than me, so. Yeah, yeah.
Holly Frey
The other thing that you asked about in your email about, like, do we get more clarity or less the farther things go back? This is something that, like, the show I used to work on, Criminalia, was kind of entirely based on this. Like, if we look at crimes, historical, true crime, from the past through a modern lens with more research, like, are any of these criminals and villains actually kind of misunderstood, which is often the case. Right. A lot of women that were vilified throughout history, it's like, no, that's not what was going on here. I mean, we had cases on that show of women who were considered witches. And it turned out really they were dealing with, you know, some kind of mental illness or even a physical infirmity that made them other. That they got, you know, ostracized or. Like, there were people that, when you look at the bigger picture, you understand, oh, they've kind of been the victim of bad press throughout history because one person told their story, and that's what got repeated. We see that all the time on this show as well. And so that is another thing that's case by case. Right. Sometimes you have better perspective from a distance, but you also lose clarity in terms of, like, being able to say with certainty what certain details were. This came up on your Elizabeth Blackwell episode that you researched, where it's like people thought she was born at one point and she was this Elizabeth, but really she's actually a different Elizabeth. And we only recently figured that out.
Tracy V. Wilson
Yep.
Holly Frey
And I say we, meaning historians. Traci and I did not figure that out. She referenced the historian, one specific person
Tracy V. Wilson
who we cited in the episode.
Holly Frey
But so that, too, is a little bit case by case. I think there are sometimes where you get a treasure trove of information kind of dropped that nobody knew throughout history and only came to light because modern, you know, living technology, records, access, enabled somebody to find it. And other times, it gets farther. It gets more and more lost. Right. I mean, Thomas Harriot's another one. We didn't know he was the first person to look at the moon through a telescope because he didn't publish about it. They found his notes in the trash 400 years later, like, in a midden heap on his family's property. So we don't know. Yeah, we always love those surprises. That's why Unearthed is so popular. I think it shifts everybody's gears about what they think.
Tracy V. Wilson
It's going to be time to work on that soon.
Holly Frey
I know. Anyway, that's the long answer to you, and I hope it was illuminating and not overwhelming. If you would like to write to us and ask us a question or share pictures of art, animals, whatever. Also, thank you for the art. We always love it. Listen, we love a little felted activity that's made of cat fur. You can do that@history podcastheartradio.com if you want to see the show notes and the resources that we use to put together an episode. You can do that@mystinhistory.com if you would like to subscribe to the show and you haven't gotten to that yet. Easy peasy rice and Cheesy. You could do it on the iHeartRadio app or anywhere you listen to your favorite shows.
Tracy V. Wilson
Stuff youf Missed in History Class is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
Episode: Charles Goodyear and Vulcanized Rubber
Date: July 13, 2026
Hosts: Holly Frey & Tracy V. Wilson
In this engaging episode, Holly and Tracy dive deep into the tumultuous life and legacy of Charles Goodyear, the inventor commonly credited with the discovery of vulcanized rubber. What starts as an attempt to provide a brief background for a planned sneaker history episode becomes a full exploration of Goodyear’s fascinating—and often frustrating—story. The hosts do not shy away from Goodyear’s personal failings, the heartbreak he caused his family, and the relentless setbacks he encountered as an inventor. This narrative threads through the accidental discovery of vulcanization and its monumental impact on modern industry.
Memorable banter:
[10:04 Holly]: “He was not before aware that the manufacture was so imperfectly understood. He was blessed with ignorance of the obstacles... but soon learned... the experimenter... was obliged to wait... before he could know... that his articles would not decompose.”
Notable Goodyear self-deprecating humor:
[17:06 Holly]: “If you meet a man who has on an India rubber stock coat, vest, and shoes with an India rubber money purse without a cent of money in it, that is he.”
Personal reflection:
[20:04 Tracy]: “Again, he saw those dear to him... stripped of the comforts with which they were surrounded. Everything that he possessed was brought to the hammer for the discharge of private bills.”
Reflection on patents and the hardships of inventors:
[43:10 Tracy]: “He takes the precaution to procure letters patent for his invention... but which amounts chiefly to this, that the government grants him permission to fight his own battles... the more difficult one of supplying the market... and of preventing others from doing it by encroaching on his patent.”
The tone throughout is candid, wry, and deeply empathetic, balancing admiration for Goodyear’s ingenuity with criticism for his self-defeating decisions. This episode provides a nuanced portrait of an inventor whose name became synonymous with resilience—both his own, and that of his most famous creation.