The Murphy bed is named after William Lawrence Murphy (1876–1957), president of the Murphy Bed and Door Company.
Pre-Murphy folding beds Under the name "
bureau bedstead" the fold-up bed appeared in the eighteenth century, but never gained popularity. When closed, the bed looked like a
bureau with fake drawers, hence the name. Gloag points to three eighteenth century pieces: one manufactured by
Gillows of Lancaster and London in 1788, another one advertised by John Taylor in 1769, and the third one with a description published in the
Prices for Cabinet Work in 1797. A foldup bed was exhibited in the US by
Sarah E. Goode in 1884, and foldup beds were offered through the
Sears, Roebuck & Co. catalog in 1895, before Murphy's inventions.
Murphy Murphy applied for his first patents around 1900. According to legend, he was wooing an opera singer, but living in a
one-room apartment in
San Francisco, and the moral code of the time frowned upon a woman entering a man's bedroom. Murphy's invention converted his bedroom into a parlor, enabling him to entertain. Murphy introduced pivot and counterbalanced designs for which he received a series of patents, including one for a "Disappearing Bed" on June 18, 1912, and another for a "Design for a Bed" on June 27, 1916. Murphy beds are used for space-saving purposes, much like
trundle beds, and are popular where floor space is limited, such as small houses, apartments, hotels, mobile homes and college dormitories. In recent years, Murphy bed units have included options such as lighting, storage cabinets, and office components. They saw a resurgence in popularity in the early 2010s due to the weak economy, with children moving back in with their parents and families choosing to renovate homes rather than purchasing larger ones. In 1989, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled that the term "Murphy Bed" had entered common usage so thoroughly that it was
no longer eligible for
trademark protection. ==Designs and models==