pepper-corns. The berries are gathered in July and August, when of full size, but still unripe—the small branches bearing fruit being broken off and dried in the sun and air for some days, when the stalks are removed and the berries are ready for packing. These owe their aromatic properties to an essential oil present to the extent of 3 to 4½% and consisting largely of eugenol or allyl guaiacol, HO(CH3O)C6H3·C3H5. The chief use of pimento is as a spice. The oil, the action of which resembles that of cloves, is occasionally used in medicine, and is also employed in perfuming soaps. The “ bay rum ” used as a toilet article is a tincture scented with the oil of the leaves of an allied species, Pimenta acris, commonly known as the bayberry tree.
PIN (a doublet with “ pen ” from Lat. pinna, feather, pinnacle, which is said to contain the same root as πίτυς, pine tree, and properly to mean a sharp point or end), a small peg or bolt of metal or wood, not necessarily pointed, employed as a fastening
to connect together different parts of an article, as a stop to
limit the motion of some moving piece in a machine, as a support
on which a small wheel may turn, &c., but most commonly a
small metal spike, used for fastening portions of fabrics together,
having one end pointed and at the other a bulbed head, or some
other arrangement for preventing the spike from passing entirely
through the cloth or other material with which it is employed.
In one form or another pins of this last kind are of the highest
antiquity, the earliest form doubtless being a natural thorn.
Pins of bronze, and bronze brooches in which the pin is the essential
feature, are of common occurrence among the remains of the
bronze age. The ordinary domestic pin had become in the 15th
century an article of sufficient importance in England to warrant
legislative notice, as in 1483 the importation of pins was prohibited
by statute. In 1540 Queen Catherine received pins from
France, and again in 1543 an act was passed providing that “ no
person shall put to sale any pinnes but only such as shall be double
headed, and have the heads soldered fast to the shank of the
pinnes, well smoothed, the shank well shapen, the points well
and round filed, canted and sharpened.” At that time pins
of good quality were made of brass; but a large proportion of
those against which the legislative enactment was directed were
made of iron wire blanched and passed as brass pins. To a large
extent the supply of pins in England was received from France
till about 1626, in which year the manufacture was introduced
into Gloucestershire by John Tilsby. His business flourished so
well that he soon gave employment to 1500 persons, and Stroud
pins attained a high reputation. In 1636 the pin makers of
London formed a corporation, and the manufacture was subsequently
established at Bristol and Birmingham, the latter town
ultimately becoming the principal centre of the industry. So
early as 1775 the attention of the enterprising colonists in Carolina
was drawn to the manufacture by the offer of prizes for the
first native-made pins and needles. At a later date several
p1n-making machines were invented in the United States.
During the war of 1812, when the price of pins rose enormously,
the manufacture was actually started, but the industry was not
fairly successful till about the year 1836 when the Howe Manufacturing
Company was formed at Birmingham, Connecticut.
Previous to this an American, Lemuel W. Wright, had in 1824
secured in England a patent for a machine to make solid-headed
pins, which established the industry on its present basis.
The old form of pin consisted of a shank with a separate head of fine wire twisted round and secured to it. Fine wire for heads was first wound on a lathe round a spit the exact circumference of the pin shanks to be headed. In this way a long elastic spiral was produced which had next to be cut into heads, each consisting of two complete turns of the spiral. These heads were softened by annealing and made into a heap for the heading boy, whose duty was to thrust a number of shanks into the heap and let as many as might be fit themselves with heads. Such shanks as came out thus headed were passed to the header, who with a falling block and die arrangement compressed together shank and head of such a number as his die-block was fitted for. All the other operations of straightening the wire, cutting, pointing, &c., were separately performed, and these numerous details connected with the production of a common pin were seized on by Adam Smith as one of the most remarkable illustrations of the advantages of the division of labour.
The beautiful automatic machinery by which pins are now made of single pieces of wire is an invention of the 19th century. In 1817 a communication was made at the Patent Office by Seth Hunt, describing a machine for making pins with “ head, shaft and point in one entire piece.” By this machine a suitable length of wire was cut off and held in a die till a globular head was formed on one end by compression, and the other end was pointed by the revolution around it of a roughened steel wheel. This machine does not appear to have come into use; but in 1824 Wright patented the pin-making apparatus above referred to as the parent form of the machinery now employed. A factory equipped with his machines was established in London, but the company which owned it was not successful. The plant passed into the hands of Daniel Foote-Tayler of Birmingham, who obtained an extension of Wright's patent for five years from 1838, and his firm was the first to carry on the production of machine made solid-headed pins on a commercial basis. In a modern pin-making machine wire of suitable gauge running off a reel is drawn in and straightened by passing between straightening pins or studs set in a table. When a pin length has entered it is caught by lateral jaws, beyond which enough of the end projects to form a pin-head. Against this end a steel punch advances and compresses the metal by a die arrangement into the form of a head. The pin length is immediately cut off and the headed piece drops into a slit sufficiently wide to pass the wire through but retain the head. The pins are consequently suspended by the head while their projecting extremities are held against a revolving cutter, by which they are pointed. They are next cleaned by being boiled in weak beer, and then arranged in a copper pan in layers alternating with layers of grained tin. The contents of the pan are covered with water over which a quantity of argol (bitartrate of potash) is sprinkled, and after boiling for several hours the brass pins are coated with a thin deposit of tin, which gives them their silvery appearance. They are then washed in clean water, and dried and polished by being revolved in a barrel, mixed with dry bran or fine sawdust, from which they are winnowed finished pins. A large proportion of the pins sold are stuck into paper by an automatic machine not less ingenious than the pin making machine itself. Mourning pins are made of iron wire, finished by immersing in black japan and drying in a stove. A considerable variety of pins, including the ingeniously coiled, bent and twisted nursery safety pin, ladies' hairpins, &c, are also made by automatic machinery. The sizes of ordinary pins range from the 3½-in. stout blanket pin down to the finest slender gilt pin used by entomologists, 4500 of which weigh about an ounce.
PINA, RUY DE (1440-1521), Portuguese chronicler, was a native of Guarda. He acted as secretary of the embassy sent
by King John II. to Castile in the spring of 1482, and in the
following September returned there as sole envoy. He was
present at the execution of the duke of Braganza at Evora in
1483, and in 1484 went to Rome as secretary of an embassy to Pope Innocent VII. On his return, the king charged him to write a history of his reign and gave him a pension for his support. Following the arrival of Columbus from his first voyage in 1493, Pina was one of the commissaries dispatched to Barcelona by John II. to negotiate with the Catholic sovereigns respecting the limits of theirj respective jurisdictions. In September 1495 he attested the Will of John II. in his capacity as a notary public, and on the 2 5th of October of the same year he was present at his master's death at Alvor and opened and read his testament. King Manoel confirmed his pension and appointed him in 1497 chronicler of the kingdom, keeper of the archives and royal librarian, with a suitable salary. By 1504 Pina had completed his chronicles of Alphonso V. and John II. King John III. charged him with a history of his father, Manoel, and at his death Pina had carried it down to the capture of Azamor, as we know from Damiao de Goes, who used it in preparing his own chronicle of that monarch.
It is probable that the chronicles of the early kings of Portugal from Sancho I. to Alphonso IV. which were published under Pina's name in the 18th century were written by Fernao Lopes and edited by Pina, while that of King Duarte seems to have been the joint production of Lopes and Azurara, with Pina again as the editor only. Pina was a favourite of fortune dur1ng his life, for, apart from royal benefactions, he received presents from public men who wished to figure well in his books, and after his death he obtained the credit for work that was not his. His authority as an historian is considerable, and his frankness is said to have provoked remark from contemporaries.
Pina's chronicle of King Alphonso IV. was first published in Lisbon in 1853; those of King Duarte and King Alphonso V in vol. i. of the Collecdo de lwros medztos da hzstona portugueza