by Joe_DS »
Mon Dec 15, 2008 9:40 pm
Fascinating. I looked over the patents attributed to W.H.Daily --
http://www.google.com/patents?q=%22WH+D ... ch+Patents -- and spotted quite a number. After a little google searching, I also found WH Daily's obituary --
"WILLIAM HENRY DAILY - July 1937
(Contributed from family papers by Jacqueline Owens)
Last rites were held here for W.H. Daily of Tucson, Ariz., who died suddenly of heart trouble at Jamestown, N.Y., June 27, aged 46. He was the son of J.W. Daily and was born near Carthage. He went in 1899 to Tucson to become secretary to his uncle, Judge W.H. Barnes, and to attend the University there. He became interested in copper mining and with his brother John located a good deposit of copper ore and they formed a company known as the Daily Mines, which was now the second largest producer in Tima* county. Will Daily was president of the company. He was also an inventor; having at one time 17 patents, one of which, an automatic phonograph was used in hotels and restaurants, and brought him royalties.
He was in Jamestown to interest a promoting company in a voting machine he had invented, when he died. Surviving wren his widow and son William, his sisters and brothers, Lulu Atkins, Daisy Siegfried, Gertrude Snow, Juanita Perry, Marjory Duncan, Mamie Hughes, Minnie Moesser, John Clyde, Lloyd and Floyd Daily, and William Berger."FROM:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.anc ... obits.htmlAs noted above, the automatic phonograph was used in hotels and restaurants, but according to the information provided on the Jukebox History page --
http://juke-box.dk/gert-history14-33.htm very few were sold, so the "royalties" mentioned in the obituary couldn't have amounted to much.
I also noticed that there was no mention of any company founded by Daily in RJ Wakeman's "263 Machines and Their Makers: 1916 - 1923" --
http://www.gracyk.com/makers.shtml but I'm wondering if any references exist in "The Talking Machine World," which was the major US phonograph trade publication. I remember that Mr. Wakeman had access to a number of copies, so you may want to get in touch with him via the "contact" jump that appears on the above site.
If I find anything else, I'll post it in a follow-up.
Joe_DS