And many people think Henry Ford invented mass production with interchangeable parts.
Read up on Eli Whitney.
Not quite ... for the parts made by Whitney were only interchangeable within the SAME lot produced at the same time, using the same tooling and/or dies. When they wore out, new ones were made and were of differing dimensions that did not interchange with products from the previous manufacturing run(s).
It is actually John M. Hall of Portland, Maine, inventor of the famous Hall breech-loading rifles who is credited with not only designing the first workable micrometer of 1-in-40 thread pitch to obtain reliable readings to 1000ths of an inch, but he created the standardized thread forms we still use today. He is also credited with standardized gauging, adding counter-balances to water-powered drivewheels to eliminate chatter, designing horizontal millers and shapers, etc., etc., that paved the way for true interchangeabilty of parts.
His first 100 rifles off the line, once all passing the military acceptance tests, were taken apart and put into piles. Laborers, not gunsmiths, reassembled them by taking a part from each different pile ... and once again all 100 rifles passed all of the tests!
It is alleged, in the 2 books on Hall, the”at Whitney was ‘given the credit’ for interchangeable parts, as the industrialists and politicians of that day (sounds like today!) didn’t want the
dreaded military industrial complex to be credited with such a historic achievement.
A machine bolt from one of his 1819 model flintlock passes a thread check of today, for that thread form. Mr. Hall was, to me, brilliant ... more amazing and creative in his machinery and gauging inventions than he was as the inventor of the visionary breech-loading Hall rifle!