[The Age of Invention by Holland Thompson]@TWC D-Link book
The Age of Invention

CHAPTER VIII
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His grandfather, John Stevens I, came from England in 1699 and made himself a lawyer and a great landowner.

His father, John Stevens II, was a member from New Jersey of the Continental Congress and presided at the New Jersey Convention which ratified the Constitution.
John Stevens III was graduated at King's College (Columbia) in 1768.

He held public offices during the Revolution.

To him, perhaps more than to any other man, is due the Patent Act of 1790, for the protection of American inventors, for that law was the result of a petition which he made to Congress and which, being referred to a committee, was favorably reported.

Thus we may regard John Stevens as the father of the American patent law.
John Stevens owned the old Dutch farm on the Hudson on which the city of Hoboken now stands.


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