Clarence Winfred Spicer

How are you related to Clarence Winfred Spicer?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Clarence Winfred Spicer's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Clarence Winfred Spicer

Birthdate:
Birthplace: West Hallock, Peoria County, Illinois, United States
Death: November 21, 1939 (63)
Miami, Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States (heart disease)
Immediate Family:

Son of John Green Spicer and Cornelia Spicer
Husband of Anna Olive Spicer
Father of Harold Willis Spicer; Dr. Robert Thurston Spicer; John Reed Spicer and Wilfred Clarence Spicer
Brother of Minnie Spicer; Clara Almyra Spicer and Ernest Samuel Spicer

Occupation: inventor, "eccentric genius"
Managed by: E. Paige Weston
Last Updated:

About Clarence Winfred Spicer

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarence_W._Spicer

Clarence Winfred Spicer (November 30, 1875 – November 21, 1939) was an American automotive engineer and inventor, best known for the first practical design and use of the universal joint in automotive applications.

Early life and education

Spicer Manufacturing Company advertisement for universal joints in the Automobile Trade Journal, 1916. Spicer was born November 30, 1875 in Edelstein, Illinois to John and Cornelia Babcock Spicer; the third of four children. The Spicer family operated a creamery and at a young age Spicer learned how to maintain the creamery equipment while helping his father. In 1891, due to the Spicer family's Seventh Day Baptist religion, Spicer was sent to the church's Alfred Academy in Alfred, New York to complete his education. He returned home without finishing school in 1894 to help his father with the creamery business after his father was injured in farming accident. On December 1, 1896, Spicer married Anna Olive Burdick, a fellow student at Alfred. The couple took up residence near the family dairy farm at Edelstein. In 1899, Spicer enrolled in mechanical and electrical engineering courses at Cornell University where he undertook the design of a motor car as a class assignment. During the design exercise Spicer developed the design of a universal joint that was practical for automotive use. With the encouragement of his instructor, Dean Robert H. Thurston, Spicer applied for and received a patent for a practical automotive universal joint on May 19, 1903. Thurston died on October 25, 1903 and without a mentor, Spicer decided to leave Cornell during his last semester of school and start the manufacture of his universal joint design for sale to automotive manufacturers.

Career

Spicer began manufacturing his invention through an arrangement with the Potter Printing Press Company in Plainfield, New Jersey, on April 1, 1904. Spicer incorporated the Spicer Universal Joint Manufacturing Company in May 1905 and shortened the name to Spicer Manufacturing Company in 1909.

Nearly a century later, Spicer's company is now Dana Incorporated, with headquarters in Toledo, Ohio, and worldwide automotive parts sales approaching US$10 billion per year.

Later life and death

Spicer served as a member of the Alfred University Board of Trustees from 1917 until his death in November 1939. He was a member and officer of the Society for Automotive Engineers (SAE).

Legacy

Spicer is a member of the Automotive Hall of Fame.


Obituary: Sabbath Recorder 128:1, p. 14.

view all

Clarence Winfred Spicer's Timeline

1875
November 30, 1875
West Hallock, Peoria County, Illinois, United States
1897
October 12, 1897
Edelstein, Peoria County, Illinois, United States
1903
February 22, 1903
Ithaca, New York, United States
1908
January 11, 1908
1915
December 4, 1915
Plainfield, Union County, New Jersey, United States
1939
November 21, 1939
Age 63
Miami, Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States
????
Spicer Manufacturing Company