Elijah McCoy (born May 2, 1843?, Colchester, Ontario, Canada—died October 10, 1929, Nankin township [now in Westland], Michigan, U.S.) was a Canadian-American inventor of a device to lubricate steam engines. McCoy’s inventions were considered so outstanding that customers reportedly asked for the “real McCoy” when requesting his designs. Today, calling something the real McCoy indicates that it is the original and best version of that thing.
McCoy was born to George and Mildred McCoy, who had fled from Kentucky to Canada through the Underground Railroad to escape slavery. When he was 3, he and his parents moved to the U.S. and settled in Michigan. He grew up with 11 siblings. At a young age, McCoy became interested in how machines work, and by the time he was 15, his parents had raised enough money for him to travel to Edinburgh to apprentice with a mechanical engineer. McCoy then moved back to Michigan. However, because of racial discrimination, he struggled to find employment that suited his level of education.
In 1868 McCoy married Ann Elizabeth Stewart, but she died after four years. He married his second wife, Mary Eleanora Delaney, in 1873.
One of McCoy’s first jobs involved lubricating, or oiling, the moving parts of train engines for the Michigan Central Railroad. This was a time-consuming process that had to be done by hand. A train had to be stopped in order to have someone walk around and add oil to each part of the machinery so that the engine could operate without overheating. In 1872 McCoy invented a device that used steam pressure to automatically lubricate parts of a train engine while it was in motion. This automatic lubricator was extremely successful, and McCoy received a patent for it that same year. His device was also adopted in other industries, such as drilling and mining.
Eventually, McCoy was able to stop working for the railroad to devote himself to creating other inventions. His well-known inventions include a portable ironing board and a lawn sprinkler. However, most of his inventions had to do with machine lubrication. In 1920 McCoy created the Elijah McCoy Manufacturing Company in Detroit, with himself as vice president. Two years later he and his wife were involved in a car accident. His wife died from complications about a year later, and McCoy had health problems for the remainder of his life. He eventually died after suffering from hypertension and dementia. During his lifetime, McCoy had received more than 50 patents for his work, and in 1975 his birthday was established as Elijah McCoy Day by the city of Detroit.