
It's wet mitt season. Here's who invented the thing that's saving our winter
CBC
If you want to dry out your sopping wet winter boots and mitts without turning on the dryer, you may want to use a specially designed rack that sits on a forced-air register. Canadians know it does the job beautifully.
And you can thank the late Lorne McCartney of Ottawa for that rack.
McCartney was a captain in the Canadian Armed Forces who served in Germany in the 1970s. He attended the Royal Military College of Canada alongside astronaut Marc Garneau and retired lieutenant-general and senator Roméo Dallaire.
McCartney also is the designer of that first mitt and boot dryer that Canadians have grown to love.
"It was us kids playing outside all the time and coming inside with all the wet mitts and boots," said Lorne's son, Mark McCartney of Port Perry, Ont., who is one of three siblings. At the time, the family lived in Barrie.
McCartney's mom started heaping the mitts onto registers all over the house. "And my father watching it happen said, 'There's got to be a better way,'" he said.
In his spare time, McCartney's dad began sketching out ideas and building prototypes from wood and coat hangers. After designing the perfect solution to drying out the family's winter gear, Lorne McCartney snagged both Canadian and American patents under the name Jili Nolor Corporation in the mid-1980s.
By 1993, business was booming and the McCartney family, who by then had moved to the Ottawa suburb of Kanata for Lorne's position at National Defence headquarters, gave up his career to work full time on his invention.
The patents lasted 17 years, and after that, a Chinese company began manufacturing a replica of McCartney's design. Because it was cheaper, a number of distributors chose the Chinese model, said Mark McCartney.
"So that was kind of a bit of a sore spot with my father in the later years where Canadian Tire stopped using Canadian products," he said.
"After my father passed, the company was kind of liquidated to a certain extent," said McCartney, whose dad died at age 68 in 2016 after a battle with chronic inflammatory lung disease.
"The guy that originally made them for us, he still manufactures it. As long as it still makes some sort of a profit, he'll continue to make it," said Mark McCartney about the Norex Division.
The Mitt'nBoot Dryer is still manufactured at the plastics factory in the Toronto suburb of Scarborough.
His mom still gets a cut, said McCartney.