Amanda Theodosia Jones was an American author and inventor, most noted for inventing a vacuum method of canning called the Jones Process. Jones was descended from Puritan, Huguenot, Quaker and Methodist ancestors. Her forefathers were among the patriots of the American Revolution. She wrote a number of war poems during the Civil War. These were published, with others, in book form. Ill health for a number of years made it impossible for her to keep up her literary work. Some of her poems appeared in Scribner's Magazine while others were published in the Century, Our Continent, and other journals. She published a volume of verse entitled A Prairie Idyl and Other Poems. She made her home in Chicago, Illinois.
Influenced by the writings of Thomas Dick and the spiritualism movement, Jones became a convert to spiritualism in 1854 and believed herself to be a medium. In 1869, believing that the spirits wanted her there, she moved to Chicago, where she wrote for a number of periodicals, including Western Rural, Universe, Interior, and Bright Sides.
Patents and inventions – 1872–1880
In 1872, Jones developed a vacuum canning process for preserving food, with the help of Professor Leroy C. Cooley of Albany, who was the brother-in-law of her sister Emily. The following year she obtained five patents relating to her process, of which two listed her as sole inventor. Again following the advice of the spirits she communicated with, she developed another invention, an oil burner, which she patented in 1880. However, her attempts to establish businesses based on her inventions were unsuccessful, and she returned to writing, publishing A Prairie Idyll in 1882. There is one reference that maintains she has a patent for a Ready-Opener Tin Can, but that is the only, unsupported, reference to this patent.
Founding of Women's Canning and Preserving Company – 1890
A strong supporter of women's rights and suffrage, she founded the Women's Canning and Preserving Company in Chicago in 1890, which employed only women. In an address to her employees, Jones said that "This is a woman's industry. No man will vote our stock, transact our business, keep our books, pronounce on women's wages, supervise our factories. Give men whatever work is suitable, but keep the governing power. This is a business training school for working women – you with all the rest. Here is a mission; let it be fulfilled." When this venture failed in 1893, she left Chicago for Junction City, Kansas, where two of her sisters lived.
Later life
Jones continued to work with both of her inventions, obtaining patents on the canning process in 1903, 1905, and 1906, and additional patents relating to the oil burner in 1904, 1912, and 1914. She continued to publish occasional literary works, including the Rubaiyat of Solomon and Other Poems in 1905. Following the Spanish–American War the U.S. Navy began investigating the transition from coal fired ships to oil. In 1904 they released a 489-page report which detailed extensively a comparison between coal and oil. Jones was asked to write a technical review of the report for Engineer: With which is Incorporated Steam Engineering. According to her obituary she was paid liberally for her contribution of four articles in 1904 and 1905. Those articles are online at the HathiTrust:
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In 1910, she published her autobiography, A Psychic Autobiography, which focused on her interest in spiritualism. Late in her life, she moved to Brooklyn, New York, to pursue business interests, where she died of influenza in 1914. She was listed in Who's Who in America for 1912–13 and in Woman's Who's Whoin America for 1914–15. She is buried in Riverside Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio in her brother William's plot.
Works
She quit teaching in 1854 after her first poem was published by the Ladies' Repository of Cincinnati. In 1861, she published Ulah, and Other Poems; a second book of verse, Poems, was published in 1867. Her health had been fragile since contracting tuberculosis in 1859; after the publication of Poems, she spent a year recuperating at the home of her widowed mother in Wisconsin.
Books
Jones published six books in her lifetime. All are available online at the Internet Archive.
Between 1855 and 1864 Jones published frequently in the Ladies Repository. These poems, along with one she published in Overland Monthly and Out West magazine in 1894, are available at the University of Michigan's
Volume: 15, Issue: 12, Dec 1855, pp. 736
Volume: 15, Issue: 11, Nov 1855, pp. 678
Volume: 15, Issue: 4, Apr 1855, pp. 242
Volume: 15, Issue: 10, Oct 1855, pp. 616
Volume: 16, Issue: 8, Aug 1856, pp. 458
Volume: 16, Issue: 7, July 1856, pp. 424
Volume: 16, Issue: 9, Sept 1856, pp. 544
Volume: 16, Issue: 3, Mar 1856, pp. 155
Volume: 16, Issue: 4, Apr 1856, pp. 217
Volume: 17, Issue: 1, Jan 1857, pp. 3
Volume: 17, Issue: 8, Aug 1857, pp. 453
Volume: 17, Issue: 2, Feb 1857, pp. 71
Volume: 17, Issue: 11, Nov 1857, pp. 684
Volume: 17, Issue: 6, June 1857, pp. 340
Volume: 17, Issue: 4, Apr 1857, pp. 199
Volume: 18, Issue: 11, Nov 1858, pp. 652
Volume: 18, Issue: 1, Jan 1858, pp. 32
Volume: 18, Issue: 5, May 1858, pp. 260
Volume: 18, Issue: 4, Apr 1858, pp. 208
Volume: 18, Issue: 7, July 1858, pp. 410
Volume: 18, Issue: 8, Aug 1858, pp. 476
Volume: 18, Issue: 11, Nov 1858, pp. 663
Volume: 19, Issue: 3, Mar 1859, pp. 133
Volume: 19, Issue: 2, Feb 1859, pp. 96
Volume: 19, Issue: 5, May 1859, pp. 262
Volume: 19, Issue: 6, June 1859, pp. 352
Volume: 19, Issue: 11, Nov 1859, pp. 667
Volume: 22, Issue: 1, Jan 1862, pp. 34
Volume: 22, Issue: 8, Aug 1862, pp. 498
Volume: 22, Issue: 12, Dec 1862, pp. 739
Volume: 22, Issue: 10, Oct 1862, pp. 628
Volume: 23, Issue: 3, Mar 1863, pp. 180
Volume: 23, Issue: 1, Jan 1863, pp. 36
Volume: 23, Issue: 2, Feb 1863, pp. 96
Volume: 23, Issue: 8, Aug 1863, pp. 490
Volume: 24, Issue: 9, Sept 1864, pp. 533
Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume: 24, Issue: 139, July 1894, pp. 44