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Sun, 01.01.18321

Sarah Boone, Inventor born

Sarah Boone

*Sarah Boone was born on this date in 1832.  She was a Black seamstress and inventor.  

Sarah Marshall was born a slave in Craven County, North Carolina, near the town of New Bern.  On November 25, 1847, she married James Boone in New Bern; they had eight children.  The Boone family left North Carolina for New Haven, Connecticut, before the outbreak of the American Civil War; they settled into a house at 30 Winter Street. Boone worked as a dressmaker.  

On April 26, 1892, she obtained the United States patent rights for her improvements to the ironing board. Boone's ironing board was designed to improve the quality of ironing sleeves and the bodies of women's garments. The board was very narrow, curved, and made of wood. The shape and structure allowed it to fit a sleeve, which was reversible so that one could iron both sides of the sleeve. 

Along with Miriam Benjamin, Ellen Eglin, and Sarah Goode, Boone was one of four Black women inventors of her time who developed a new technology for the home.  Sarah Marshall Boone died in 1904 and is buried in a family plot in Evergreen Cemetery in New Haven.   

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