Background
Hammesfahr was born in Evangelisch, Flachsberg, Wald Solingen, Rhineland, Prussia and died in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York—the son of Carl Wilhelm Hammesfahr (1811–1878) and Caroline Wilhelmine Remschied (1806–1878). The Hammesfahr family is an old Solingen steel family tracing its roots back to the medieval armorer"s guild.
Career
He was awarded the patent by the United States Patent Office in 1880. This patent and a number of associated patents also provided the practical foundation for the development and production of fiber optics (Hammesfahr has been called “the grandfather of fiber optics”) and fiberglass. All were purchased by the Libbey Glass Company in Toledo, Ohio.
Libbey Glass purchased the fiberglass patent among others from Hammesfahr with the intention of displaying the fabric in a spectacular manner at the At first, the company wove lamp shades from the glass fabric.
Then it caught the eye of actress Georgia Cayven who requested a dress be made from lieutenant Hammesfahr designed a dress and the Libby Glass company showed it off at the 1892 World"s Fair.
The dress was a sensation, no matter how overshadowed it was by Edison’s fantastic public debut of the electric lightbulb. Many onlookers were impressed by the dress at the 1892 World"s Fair and a copy was purchased for $30,000 by Princess Eulalie of Spain.
However, the dress reportedly impractical and no one else is known to have bought another dress.
Hammesfahr"s granddaughter modeled a glass dress her mother had made at the 1904 Saint Louis World"s Fair and reported that the dress scratched and was fragile. Despite this, the dresses, neckties, and other attire made from the glass fabric succeeded in publicizing the flexible glass thread technology. Hammesfahr"s creation inspired new, innovative uses for glass fabric.
lieutenant could withstand corrosive chemicals so chemists and druggist used it to filter solid particles out of liquid.
Tangled glass fibers, glass wool, made a great insulator and was used by industry to surround steam pipes. Glass fabric was even used as bandages.