History of Gillette Razors
On November 15, 1904, patent
#775,134 was granted to King
C. Gillette for a safety
'razor'. King Camp Gillette
was born in Fond du Lac,
Wisconsin in 1855. To
support himself when the
family’s home was destroyed
in the Chicago Fire of 1871,
Gillette became a traveling
salesman. This work led him
to William Painter, the
inventor of the disposable
Crown Cork bottle cap, who
assured Gillette that a
successful invention was one
that was purchased over and
over again by satisfied
customer.
In 1895, after several years
of considering and rejecting
possible inventions,
Gillette suddenly had a
brilliant idea while shaving
one morning. It was an
entirely new razor and blade
that flashed in his mind—a
razor with a safe,
inexpensive, and disposable
blade.
It took six years for
Gillette’s idea to evolve.
During that time, technical
experts told Gillette that
it would be impossible to
produce steel that was hard,
thin, and inexpensive enough
for commercial development
of the disposable razor
blade. Then in 1901, MIT
graduate William Nickerson
agreed to try.
By 1903, he had succeeded.
Production of the Gillette ®
safety razor and blade began
as the Gillette Safety Razor
Company started operations
in South Boston. Sales grew
steadily. During World War
I, the U.S. Government
issued Gillette safety
razors to the entire armed
forces. By the end of the
war, some 3.5 million razors
and 32 million blades were
put into military hands,
thereby converting an entire
nation to the Gillette
safety razor.
Straight Razors
Our Range of Safety Razors
Our Range of Gillette Mach 3
Razors
Our Range of Cut Throat
Razors
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