Item #28096 [Original art, Design Patent] DESIGN PATENT 19,179 "Meat Rack" C. A. / Gloekler Gloekler, Charles A.
[Original art, Design Patent] DESIGN PATENT 19,179 "Meat Rack"
[Original art, Design Patent] DESIGN PATENT 19,179 "Meat Rack"
Original art for Design patent 19,179 - a "DESIGNER" meat rack

[Original art, Design Patent] DESIGN PATENT 19,179 "Meat Rack"

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Self-published 1889. First Edition. One sheet of 15 x 10 inch bristol board. Black ink on white paper, with paper repair and small chip upper left. The assigned application serial number was 311,732 and it was received by the US Patent Office (USPTO) on May 22, 1889. The patent was issued on June 25, 1889, and given patent number 19,179 with a term of 14 years. Witnessed by Joseph S. Latimer and Carleton E. Snell. Various notations in black and red ink in the outer margins. Stamped on the rear "US Patent Office Chief Clerk May 22, 1889" and "Draftsman May 21, 1889". We include a printout of the patent text for reference.

NOTE: This is one of a collection of original patent art recently received. If you are interested in knowing about additional items please let us know. Very Good. [28096]


Hand-drawn patent drawings, while critical to the patent process, don't often appear for sale. With only the inventor, attorney, and USPTO the likely recipients, few were made, and after expiring many were discarded.

This patent design presents a very high-end meat rack design. With fancy scrolling, it includes a cow, butchering knives and at the very top. It would be the pride of the local butcher shop, something that would enhance the butcher shop and its offerings! Charles A. Gloekler was the General Manager and Director of the Bernard-Gloeckler Co, a Pittsburgh PA company. The concern is noted as an industrial furniture supplier in a 1919 directory.

DESIGN PATENTS: what they are, how long they last, and records management

Design patents "protect the way an article looks." Historically important, they verify new design innovations, document changing cultural tastes, and establish valuable competitive business advantages. New patents preserve for the stated term the inventor's sole ownership and use of the design.

The US Patent Office (USPTO) calls “the drawing disclosure ... the most important element of the application...As the drawing or photograph constitutes the entire visual disclosure of the claim, it is of utmost importance that the drawing or photograph be clear and complete, that nothing regarding the design sought to be patented is left to conjecture”

To obtain a Design patent, inventors submit an original black pen and ink drawing and a description of the innovation to the USPTO (typically with the assistance of a patent lawyer familiar with the process). The USPTO assigns the new application a "serial number" and "application date." USPTO patent examiners then vet the application to ensure it is unique and not already protected, often with additional communication between the USPTO, the inventor, and their legal representation. This process can take months if not years. Only if determined to be a new invention will the USPTO issue the inventor a Design Patent number and patent date.

During the active term of the design patent, the USPTO retains the inventor's application and drawings for use in patent dispute cases and other inquiries. After the term of the patent, the USPTO may discard or return the materials if no longer relevant to their core mission. Today, most issued patents are digitized for preservation. Older paper records and patent models have been periodically discarded most often with little fanfare and to address space or fiscal management issues.

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