Mortise locks have been used as part of door hardware systems in the US since the second quarter of the eighteenth century. In these early forms, the mortise lock mechanism was combined with a pull to open the unlocked door. Eventually, pulls were replaced by knobs. Until the mid-nineteenth century, mortise locks were only used in the most formal rooms in the most expensive houses. Other rooms used box locks or
rim locks; in contrast with embedded mortise locks, the latch itself is in a self-contained unit that is attached to the surface of the door. Rim locks have been used in the United States since the early eighteenth century. An early example of the use of mortise locks in conjunction with rim locks within one house exists at
Thomas Jefferson's
Monticello. In 1805, Jefferson wrote to his
joiner listing the locks he required for his home. While closets received rim locks, Jefferson ordered 26 mortise locks for use in the principal rooms. Depictions of available mortise lock hardware, including not only lock mechanisms themselves but also
escutcheon plates and door pulls, were widely available in the early nineteenth century in trade catalogues. However, the locks were still expensive and difficult to obtain at this time. Jefferson ordered his locks from Paris. Similarly, mortise locks were used in primary rooms in 1819 at
Decatur House in Washington, DC while rim locks were used in closets and other secondary spaces. The mortise locks used at Monticello were
warded locks. Warded locks were used in Europe from the Roman period onwards. Two English locksmiths,
Robert Barron and
Jeremiah Chubb, played a major role in creating modern
lever tumbler locks. Chubb's lock was patented in 1818. Again, the term refers to the lock mechanism, so a lock can be both a mortise lock and a lever tumbler lock. In the modern lever tumbler lock, the key moves a series of levers that allow the bolt to move in the door. The next major innovation to mortise lock mechanisms came in 1865.
Linus Yale, Jr.'s
pin tumbler mortise cylinder lock used a cam on the end of the key cylinder to operate the bolt or latch. This innovation allowed keys to be shorter as they no longer had to reach all the way through a door. Pin tumbler locks are still the most common kind of mortise door lock used today. == Mechanism ==