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Lewis Miller (philanthropist)

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Cause of death
  
Kidney disease

Name
  
Lewis Miller


Role
  
Inventor

Children
  
Mina Miller

Lewis Miller (philanthropist) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb5

Born
  
December 13, 1829 (
1829-12-13
)
Greentown, Ohio

Education
  
Subscription school, Plainfield Academy, learned machinist trade in Plainfield, Illinois and Canton, Ohio

Occupation
  
Inventor and industrialist

Employer
  
C. Aultman & Co. Aultman, Miller & Co. Buckeye Mower & Reaper Co.

Known for
  
Inventor of the Buckeye Mower (1855), Akron Plan architecture for Sunday school buildings (1867), co-founder of the Chautauqua Assembly (1874), philanthropy

Title
  
Partner, Superintendent, and President (c. 1892)

Died
  
February 17, 1899, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Mary Valinda Alexander (m. 1852)

Grandchildren
  
Charles Edison, Theodore Miller Edison, Madeleine Edison

Great grandchildren
  
John Edison Sloane, Thomas Edison Sloane, Michael Edison Sloane, Peter Edison Sloane

Similar People
  
Mina Miller, Theodore Miller Edison, Marion Estelle Edison, Charles Edison, Madeleine Edison

Lewis Miller (July 24, 1829 – February 17, 1899) was an Ohio businessman and philanthropist who made a fortune in the late 19th century as inventor of the first combine (harvester-reaper machine) with the blade mounted efficiently in front of the driver, to the side of the horse(s), rather than pulled behind. His daughter Mina (1865–1947) married fellow Ohio inventor Thomas Alva Edison on Christmas Day 1886.

Biography

Miller was born in Greentown, Ohio. He devoted much of his wealth to public service and to charitable causes associated with the Methodist Episcopal Church, and was the inventor of the "Akron Plan" for Sunday schools, a building layout with a central assembly hall surrounded by small classrooms, a configuration Miller conceived with Methodist minister John Heyl Vincent and architect Jacob Snyder. The arrangement accommodated 1) a collective opening exercise for all the children; 2) small radiating classrooms for graded instruction in the uniform lesson of the day; and 3) a general closing exercise in the central assembly area.

John Heyl Vincent collaborating was baptist layman B.F. Jacobs devised a system to encourage Sunday school work, and a committee was established to provide the International Uniform Lesson Curriculum, also known as the "Uniform Lesson Plan". By the 1800s, 80% of all new members were introduced to the church through Sunday school.

In 1874, interested in improving the training of Sunday school teachers for the Uniform Lesson Plan, Miller and Vincent worked together again to found what is now the Chautauqua Institution on the shores of Chautauqua Lake, New York.

Miller died in 1899 of kidney disease and was buried in Glendale Cemetery in Akron, Ohio.

References

Lewis Miller (philanthropist) Wikipedia