Lewis Temple
Lewis Temple
(ca. 1800-1854) invented the toggle iron, the only tool to have
revolutionized the whaling industry in the nineteenth century.
Temple was born in Richmond, Virginia, but whether he was enslaved
or free at birth and at the time he left Richmond for New Bedford
about 1829 is not known. On 20 June 1829 in New Bedford, he married
Mary Clark of Baltimore, whose brother Archibald and sister Lucinda
also ultimately settled in New Bedford with their spouses and
children.
Upon Temple's arrival in New Bedford he began working as a blacksmith
at Coffin's Wharf at the foot of Walnut Street, where he worked
until the last year of his life. In 1834 he was elected vice president
of New Bedford Union Society, the village's first antislavery
society and one of the black auxiliaries to the Massachusetts
Anti-Slavery Society, founded a year earlier.
In his Walnut Street shop in 1848 Temple invented what is now
known as the Temple toggle iron. Earlier "irons," or
harpoons, once sunk into a whale's flesh, often tended to work
themselves loose in the fury of the fight, but the Temple iron
had a pivoting head so that the point would turn once the harpoon
struck and embed itself more securely. The device, which Temple
never patented, improved the success of whaling hunt immeasurably
and must have inspired the New Bedford firm Delano and Pierce
to build Temple a new shop at the foot of School Street in 1854.
Temple, however, never worked in the new shop, itself never completed
because of the accident which caused his death that year. In the
fall of 1853 Temple was seriously injured in a fall from a plank
placed over an open sewer trench. In late March 1854 the city
approved the payment, but Temple died about six weeks later. His
personal estate was valued at $2459.75, $2000 of which was owed
his widow by the city; it was finally paid, with interest, in
February 1857.
A monument to Temple-which, because no likeness of him exists
is based on a photograph of his son, Lewis Temple Jr.-stands in
front of New Bedford Free Public Library on Pleasant Street in
New Bedford, and Temple toggle harpoons are in the collection
of the New Bedford Whaling Museum. |