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Richard Gurley Drew (June 22, 1899 – December 14, 1980) was an American inventor who worked for Johnson and Johnson, Permacel Co., and 3M in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he invented masking tape and cellophane tape.
Masking tape was created in 1925 by 3M employee Richard Gurley Drew. [1] Drew observed autobody workers growing frustrated when they removed butcher paper they had taped to cars they were painting. The strong adhesive on the tape peeled off some of the paint they had just applied. Touching up the damaged areas increased their costs.
Richard Gurley Drew: 1899 Adhesive tape [362] 2007 Samuel Leeds Allen: 1841 Flexible flyer sled [363] 2007 Samuel Slater: 1768 Cotton mill, spinning machine [364] 2007 Squire Whipple: 1804 Iron truss bridge [365] 2007 Theophilus Van Kannel: 1841 Revolving door [366] 2007 Thomas R. Pickering: 1831 Velocipede [367] 2007 Thomas Seavey Hall: 1827 ...
My therapist had enough of me. I knew it; she knew it. Our sessions had been going nowhere for months. “There’s only so much we can do here,” she said.
Scotch Tape, developed by Richard Gurley Drew at 3M in 1930 [60] Chemistry at Jamestown, Virginia , the earliest evidence of European chemical technologies in the United States, circa 1607 [ 61 ] 2008
A shocking crime investigators say was motivated by greed and cruelty started in Newport Beach, California, and quickly became one of the most surprising cat-and-mouse stories in recent years. In ...
Condemned South Carolina inmate Brad Sigmon has chosen to die next month by a firing squad.. He would be the first U.S. inmate shot to death in an execution in 15 years. Sigmon is scheduled to die ...
In 1923, tape pioneer Richard Gurley Drew at 3M invented masking tape, a paper-based tape with a mildly sticky adhesive intended to be temporarily used and removed rather than left in place permanently. In 1925, this became the Scotch brand masking tape. In 1930, Drew developed a transparent cellophane-based tape, dubbed Scotch tape.