The company was founded in 1958 by Wilbert (Bill) Lee Gore and his wife Genevieve (Vieve) Walton Gore in Newark.
Bill Gore had spent 16 years with the
DuPont Company in a number of technical positions that included fluoropolymer research when he decided to form his own company. While working in his basement, he set out to develop a process for insulating a series of parallel electrical wires using
polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a fluoropolymer discovered in 1938 by
Roy Plunkett, a chemist with DuPont. His son,
Robert W. Gore, in college at the time, suggested a method for encapsulating the wires which proved successful and led to the company's first
patent. The resulting product was called Multi-Tet cable, a multi-conductor ribbon cable used in computers, communications, and process control equipment. Bob Gore joined the company in 1963 upon completion of a Ph.D. in
chemical engineering at the
University of Minnesota. In 1969, he was researching a process for stretching extruded PTFE into pipe thread tape when he discovered that the polymer could be "expanded". The discovery followed a series of unsuccessful experiments in which he was attempting to stretch rods of PTFE by about 10%. As it turned out, the right conditions for stretching PTFE were counterintuitive. Instead of slowly stretching the heated material, he applied a sudden, accelerating yank that unexpectedly caused it to stretch about 800%. This resulted in the transformation of the solid PTFE into a microporous structure that was about 70% air. The company initially referred to this new material as "fibrillated PTFE". One year later, it was given the name of "Gore-Tex expanded PTFE". Today, expanded PTFE (ePTFE) accounts for the vast majority of the company's products. In 1985, Bill Gore received the
Prince Philip Award for Polymers in the Service of Mankind, which honored Gore's Medical Products Division. The award is given in recognition of
polymers that have provided a significant service for mankind. In 2005, the
Society of Chemical Industry presented Bob Gore with the
Perkin Medal, which recognizes the most significant achievements in
applied chemistry. In 2006, he was inducted into the
National Inventors Hall of Fame for the invention of ePTFE. Charles Carroll, a long-term business leader in the Electronics and Fabrics Divisions, replaced Bob Gore as president in 2000.
Terri Kelly, who joined Gore in 1983 as a mechanical engineer in the Fabrics Division, became president in 2005. Jason Field replaced Kelly in 2018. The company remains privately held. ==Allegations of anti-competitive practices==