New England
The Encyclopedia of Fall: R is for Raking
The popularity of the lawn rake coincided with the post-World War II boom in suburban living. Here’s a brief history of the rake — fall’s most essential tool.
Photo Credit: Brewer, Mark

Photo Credit: Thinkstock
By George!
The flexible fan rake was brought to the U.S. from Japan by entrepreneur George McGuire in 1919. American shopkeepers were unimpressed, feeling that this bamboo tool was too flimsy. When they didn’t sell, McGuire gave his rakes away. The strategy worked, and fan rakes remained a core product of the George W. McGuire Company, which was eventually bought by the Dejay Corporation in 1994, throughout the remainder of the 20th century.
Blowin’ In The Wind
The gas-powered leaf blower was created by innovative customers who discovered around 1950 that they could remove the chemical tank from Echo Inc.’s garden insecticide sprayer, add a metal pipe, and use the device as a portable apparatus. Before the end of the decade, several manufacturers had brought to market stripped-down versions, sold as lawn-maintenance tools. By 1997 leaf-blower sales had topped one million units annually.
Getting Ahead By Sucking Up
Blowing leaves is good–if your goal is just to move them around and stir up lots of dust. The more-muscular twin of the leaf blower, the leaf vacuum, takes things a step further by sucking up leaves and either collecting them in a receptacle or grinding them into mulch. The first popular model was introduced by Giant-Vac in 1966; today, manufacturers offer portable hand-held vacuums, larger varieties that attach directly to lawn mowers, and stand-alone models, too.
Nightmare on Elm Street
In 1997, George Eric Laughlin of Springfield, Ohio, patented his “glove rake”: a work glove with tines attached to the fingers.
Give Him An ‘A’
In 2008, Ryan Jansen, a student at Southern Illinois University, created the Rake N’ Take, a refashioning of the traditional tool that not only moves leaves around but also clutches them for easy lifting. Jansen’s innovation won him a Dyson Award, sponsored by bagless vacuum inventor Sir James Dyson. 


