Anna Mangin (1854- ?)

February 16, 2021 
/ Contributed By: Grace Seyoum

Anna M. Mangin|

Anna M. Mangin

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Anna Mangin is best known for inventing the pastry fork, a precursor of many modern electric mixing inventions. Born in Louisiana in October of 1854, little is known about Mangin’s childhood and adolescence. In 1877, she married A.F Mangin, a coal dealer from New York, and together the couple welcomed two sons. By 1900, Mangin relocated to New York where she lived with her immediate family. Though one of the children was lost to unknown circumstances, the family was literate and enjoyed relative stability as homeowners.

On March 1, 1892, Anna Mangin was awarded a patent (U.S. Patent Number 470,505) for the Pastry Fork. Designed with angular tines and cutters that allowed the user to beat eggs, mash potatoes, prepare salad dressing, and work together butter and flour without having to touch the food with his or her hands, the kitchen tool revolutionized kitchen labor. With this invention, Mangin paved the way for future cooking gadgets to shorten cooking durations and alleviate the physical strain of kneading, mixing, and mashing by hand.

Patent for the Pastry Fork

In 1893, Mangin’s Pastry Fork displayed the ingenuity of African American inventors and the tenacity of African American women at the World’s Columbian Exposition. Held in Chicago, Illinois, people of color and women were initially denied opportunities to participate in exhibits. After repeated demands for inclusion a limited number of non-white exhibits including Mangin’s Pastry Fork were allowed. Although her invention occupied only a small corner on the second floor, a writer on female inventions noticed the kitchen wonder and called it “the only thing of its kind at the patent’s office.”

Although Mangin’s invention seems only to benefit a small slice of the population, her contribution laid the foundation for future developments and made space for future black inventors to win patents and be featured at public exhibitions.

About the Author

Author Profile

Grace Seyoum is currently a sophomore at Northwest University. In addition to pursuing a double major in political science and English she is passionate about justice and advocacy. Grace gives back by mentoring underclassmen, teaching Sunday School, and participating in her school’s debate team. After graduation, she intends to pursue a career in law. In her free time, Grace enjoys reading obscure Russian novels, creating memes, and spending time with family.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Seyoum, G. (2021, February 16). Anna Mangin (1854- ?). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/anna-mangin-1854/

Source of the Author's Information:

AGR, “Did You Know Anna Mangin Was the African American Who Invented Pastry Fork,” Africa Global Radio, https://www.africaglobalradio.com/did-you-know-anna-mangin-was-the-african-american-who-invented-pastry-fork/; “Pastry Fork,” Google Patents, March 1, 1892, https://patents.google.com/patent/US470005A/en; Patricia Carter Sluby, The Inventive Spirit of African Americans: Patented Ingenuity, (New York: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004): Ancestry.com 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.

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