The History Of The Vacuum Cleaner.
The first mechanical device for cleaning floors was a "carpet sweeper" invented by Daniel Hess in 1860. It had rotating brush and bellows which generated suction.
After that, in 1869, Ives McGaffe created "Whirlwind” which had a belt driven fan powered by hand.
A gasoline-powered vacuum cleaner was made by John Thurman in 1899 and some historians consider it the first motorized vacuum cleaner.
Thurman's machine was patented on October 3, 1899. Soon after, he started a horse-drawn vacuum system with door to door service in St Louis. His vacuuming services were priced at US$4 per visit in 1903 - an equivalent of US$136 in 2024.
The first vacuum cleaner that used the same principle as those that we use today was invented by Hubert Cecil Booth of England in 1901.
Booth was inspired by a demonstration of a Thurman’s machine at the Empire Music Hall in London so much that he tried the idea that he had almost immediately. He placed a handkerchief on the seat of a restaurant chair, put his mouth to the handkerchief and sucked the air in. When he saw how much of the dust gathered on the handkerchief, he knew that his idea has merit. His vacuum cleaner had an internal combustion engine which powered a piston pump which pulled the air through a cloth filter.
The whole machine was pulled by a horse, and people called it "Puffing Billy." It was big, and it could not enter buildings and only its tubes were inserted through the windows. His next model was powered by electricity but was also too big and not suitable for individual homeowners so it was used as a cleaning service or it was installed in the building itself.
First cleaning machine that used a vacuum and that could be carried around was designed by Walter Griffiths in 1905. It used bellows to suck up dust and a flexible pipe.
James Kirby invented vacuum the machine in 1906, called the "Domestic Cyclone", which used water for dirt separation instead of a filter.
The first portable vacuum cleaner that had a motor was a brainchild of James Murray Spangler, a janitor from Canton, Ohio, which invented it in 1907. This machine had a rotating brush, electric fan, a box, and a bag for dust (for which James used one of his wife's pillowcases). He had no money to begin the production of his idea, and he sold the patent to William Henry Hoover in 1908.
Hoover redesigned the vacuum cleaner by placing it in a steel box and designing attachments for the hose. Subsequent innovations from the Hoover Company included disposable filter bags in 1920 and an upright vacuum cleaner in 1926.
The vacuum cleaner was a luxury at first but after the Second World War middle classes could afford it, and it slowly became a part of many households.
Today, we have many different types of vacuum cleaners. Some use filters while other collect dust through cyclonic separation. Some can even collect liquids. There are bigger variants with more power and small, hand-held vacuum cleaners, powered by batteries. Most of them are moved by hand, but there are those that have their moving power or are even robotic.