About this product
Baekeland was already wealthy due to his invention of Velox photographic paper when he began to investigate the reactions of phenol and formaldehyde in his home laboratory. Chemists had begun to recognize that many natural resins and fibers were polymers. Baekeland’s initial intent was to find a replacement for shellac, a material in limited supply because it was made naturally from the secretion of lac insects (specifically Kerria lacca). He produced a soluble phenol-formaldehyde shellac called “Novolak“, but it was not a market success,[4] even though it is still used to this day (e.g., as a photoresist).
He then began experimenting on strengthening wood by impregnating it with a synthetic resin rather than coating it.[4] By controlling the pressure and temperature applied to phenol and formaldehyde, he produced a hard moldable material that he named Bakelite, after himself.[5][6] It was the first synthetic thermosetting plastic produced, and Baekeland speculated on “the thousand and one … articles” it could be used to make.[7]: 58–59  He considered the possibilities of using a wide variety of filling materials, including cotton, powdered bronze, and slate dust, but was most successful with wood and asbestos fibers,[7] though asbestos was gradually abandoned by all manufacturers due to stricter environmental laws.[8]: 9 
Baekeland filed a substantial number of related patents.[4] Bakelite, his “method of making insoluble products of phenol and formaldehyde,” was filed on July 13, 1907 and granted on December 7, 1909.[9] He also filed for patent protection in other countries, including Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Hungary, Japan, Mexico, Russia and Spain.[10] He announced his invention at a meeting of the American Chemical Society on February 5, 1909.[11]
Baekeland started semi-commercial production of his new material in his home laboratory, marketing it as a material for electrical insulators. In the summer of 1909 he licensed the continental European rights to Rütger AG. The subsidiary formed at that time, Bakelite AG, was the first to produce Bakelite on an industrial scale.
By 1910, Baekeland was producing enough material in the US to justify expansion. He formed the General Bakelite Company of Perth Amboy, NJ as a U.S. company to manufacture and market his new industrial material, and made overseas connections to produce it in other countries.[4]
The Bakelite Company produced “transparent” cast resin (which did not include filler) for a small market during the 1910s and 1920s.[12]: 172–174  Blocks or rods of cast resin, also known as “artificial amber”, were machined and carved to create items such as pipe stems, cigarette holders and jewelry.[12][13] However, the demand for molded plastics led the company to concentrate on molding rather than cast solid resins.[12]: 172–174 
The Bakelite Corporation was formed in 1922 after patent litigation favorable to Baekeland, from a merger of three companies: Baekeland’s General Bakelite Company; the Condensite Company, founded by J. W. Aylesworth; and the Redmanol Chemical Products Company, founded by Lawrence V. Redman.[14] Under director of advertising and public relations Allan Brown, who came to Bakelite from Condensite, Bakelite was aggressively marketed as “the material of a thousand uses”.[7]: 58–59 [15] A filing for a trademark featuring the letter B above the mathematical symbol for infinity was made August 25, 1925, and claimed the mark was in use as of December 1, 1924. A wide variety of uses were listed in their trademark applications.[16]
The first issue of Plastics magazine, October 1925, featured Bakelite on its cover, and included the article “Bakelite – What It Is” by Allan Brown. The range of colors available included “black, brown, red, yellow, green, gray, blue, and blends of two or more of these”.[17] The article emphasized that Bakelite came in various forms. “Bakelite is manufactured in several forms to suit varying requirements. In all these forms the fundamental basis is the initial Bakelite resin. This variety includes clear material, for jewelry, smokers’ articles, etc.; cement, using in sealing electric light bulbs in metal bases; varnishes, for impregnating electric coils, etc.; lacquers, for protecting the surface of hardware; enamels, for giving resistive coating to industrial equipment; Laminated Bakelite, used for silent gears and insulation; and molding material, from which are formed innumerable articles of utility and beauty. The molding material is prepared ordinarily by the impregnation of cellulose substances with the initial ‘uncured’ resin.”[15]: 17  In a 1925 report, the United States Tariff Commission hailed the commercial manufacture of synthetic phenolic resin as “distinctly an American achievement”, and noted that “the publication of figures, however, would be a virtual disclosure of the production of an individual company”.[18]
In England, Bakelite Limited, a merger of three British phenol formaldehyde resin suppliers (Damard Lacquer Company Limited of Birmingham, Mouldensite Limited of Darley Dale and Redmanol Chemical Products Company of London), was formed in 1926. A new Bakelite factory opened in Tyseley, Birmingham, around 1928.[19] It was the “heart of Bakelite production in the UK” until it closed in 1987.[20]
A new factory opened in Bound Brook, New Jersey, in 1931.[7]: 75 
In 1939, the companies were acquired by Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation.
In 2005 German Bakelite manufacturer Bakelite AG was acquired by Borden Chemical of Columbus, OH, now Hexion Inc.[1]
In addition to the original Bakelite material, these companies eventually made a wide range of other products, many of which were marketed under the brand name “Bakelite plastics”. These included other types of cast phenolic resins similar to Catalin, and urea-formaldehyde resins, which could be made in brighter colors than polyoxyÂbenzylÂmethyleneÂglycolÂanhydride.[3][7]
Once Baekeland’s heat and pressure patents expired in 1927, Bakelite Corporation faced serious competition from other companies. Because molded Bakelite incorporated fillers to give it strength, it tended to be made in concealing dark colors.[7] In 1927, beads, bangles and earrings were produced by the Catalin company, through a different process which enabled them to introduce 15 new colors. Translucent jewelry, poker chips and other items made of phenolic resins were introduced in the 1930s or 1940s by the Catalin company under the Prystal name.[21][22] The creation of marbled phenolic resins may also be attributable to the Catalin company.