Who invented the clothes hanger?

The wire hanger we use today is inspired by the patent of clothes hook designed by O.A. in northern England, Connecticut, USA in 1869. Albert J. Parkhouse is an employee of Timberlake, a company called Wires and New Things. He invented the clothes rack in 1903, because employees at that time complained that there were too few clothes hooks. He folded a wire into two opposite ellipses and folded the end of the wire into a hook. Parkhouse applied for a patent for this, but we don't know whether he profited from it. Schuyler C. Hulett obtained the patent of improved clothes rack at 1932. He put hoses on the upper and lower parts of the hanger to prevent the newly washed clothes from being wrinkled by the hanger. Three years later, in a rage, Elmer D. Rogers invented a worker named Albert Parkhouse, and we have been using him. At that time, he was a blacksmith who worked as a lampshade in a small craft company in Michigan, USA. One day, he found angrily that all the clothes hooks in the cloakroom of the factory were occupied. He angrily took out a lead wire, bent it into the shape of a coat shoulder, and added a hook to it. This invention was patented by his boss.