Revra DePuy (born March 22, 1860, in Grand Rapids, Michigan, died October 9, 1921, in Warsaw, Indiana), was an American inventor, noted for his invention of the fiber splint. He was the founder of DePuy Manufacturing, now part of Johnson and Johnson.
DePuy's father was a lawyer in Grand Rapids, but the family moved to Canada when Revra was a child. After his father died, Revra's mother moved the family to Marseilles, Illinois.[1]
As a young man, DePuy supported himself by doing many kinds of work. He worked as a clerk in a drug store, and then studied chemistry at the University of Toronto, where he received a degree. After college, he invented a technique for sugar coating pills.
Later, he worked as a traveling salesman. DePuy settled in Warsaw, Indiana, and decided to make a fiber splint to replace the wooden barrel splints which had been used up to then to set bone fractures. DePuy Manufacturing became the first commercial orthopedic manufacturer in the world. The company operated out of the Hayes Hotel in Warsaw from 1895 to 1901.
On March 9, 1896, he married Miss Winifred Stoner, who was the daughter of the sheriff of Kosciusko County. The marriage was childless.
DePuy moved the manufacturing site to Niles, Michigan, from 1901 to 1904, but moved back to Warsaw, Indiana, after sales slumped. At that point, he built a factory at the corner of Columbia and Center streets in Warsaw, where the company made "fracture appliances" from 1904 to 1925. In 1905, J.O. Zimmer began working for DePuy as the first sales representative. Zimmer later left DePuy to found Zimmer Holdings[2]
DePuy died of heart disease on October 9, 1921, in Warsaw, Indiana. His wife married Herschel Leiter, who then became president of DePuy Manufacturing.