In 1830, a man named Charles Goodyear sat alone in a prison cell—not because he committed a crime, but because he couldn’t pay his debts. The world saw him as a failure. But Charles saw something else: possibility.

He had become obsessed with a strange, messy substance—natural rubber. At the time, it was nearly useless. It melted in summer, cracked in winter, and couldn’t be trusted for anything important. But Charles believed it could be more.
Even behind bars, he kept experimenting. With borrowed tools and scraps, he worked day and night. In 1839, after countless failures, he accidentally spilled a rubber-sulfur mixture near a hot stove. The result? Vulcanized rubber—flexible, durable, and weatherproof. For the first time, rubber could be used in shoes, machines, and eventually… tires and marine fenders.

He patented the process in 1844, but instead of fortune, he faced copycats and courtroom battles. He lost money. His wife Clarissa died. His children lived in hardship. Still, he kept going.
Charles Goodyear died in 1860—sick, broke, and largely forgotten.
But his invention outlived him.
In 1898, a businessman named Frank Seiberling founded a tire company—and named it Goodyear, in honor of the man who made the modern rubber industry possible.
Charles never saw it. He never made a fortune. But every car, every tire, every road that hums beneath our feet, every piece of rubber fender owes something to the man who refused to quit.
Sometimes, greatness isn’t rewarded in a lifetime.
Sometimes, it’s what we leave behind that changes everything.