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Title: Inventions


1
Inventions
Kimeisha Moore November 22, 2004
  • Inventions and their Inventors

2
John P. Holland
  • Meet John P. Holland, photographed emerging from
    the hatch of his invention, the USS Holland
    submarine. Born on the Irish coast in 1841, he
    had a fascination with both science and sea
    travel. At a young age, he became convinced that
    underwater vehicles could be useful in naval
    warfare. He developed his first draft for a
    submarine design in 1859. He later moved to the
    United States and submitted his design to the US
    Navy, which initially rejected it as a "fantastic
    scheme of a civilian landsman."

3
John P. Holland
  • Undaunted and supported by funds from the Fenian
    Movement, a secret revolutionary society
    organized in Ireland and the United States to
    achieve Irish independence from England, John
    continued his efforts. He eventually launched his
    first submarine - the Holland Number 1 - in 1877
    on the Passaic River in New Jersey. Only 14 feet
    long and powered by a 4 horsepower engine, this
    model made several successful dives.

4
The Wright Brothers Heavier controlled Flight
  • Man has long been fascinated with birds and their
    ability to fly. Before the Wright Brothers
    achieved their first heavier-than-air controlled
    flight in 1903, hundreds of men and women
    attempted to fly in gliders, airships, balloons
    and other fantastic innovations.

5
Telegraphic Cable
Cyrus Field
  • Try, try and try again" must have been Cyrus
    Field's motto. Born in Massachusetts in 1819,
    Field is credited for the success of the first
    transatlantic telecommunication cable. At the age
    of 33, after "retiring" from his successful paper
    business, Field immersed himself in the project
    of constructing a telegraph cable across the
    Atlantic Ocean.

6
Telegraphic Cable
Samuel Mourse
  • Knowing little about either cables or ocean
    travel, but convinced of the commercial merits of
    his idea, he consulted Samuel Morse and other
    experts of the period. In 1854, after obtaining
    charters from British and American governments
    and support from British cable companies, he
    founded the New York, Newfoundland and London
    Telegraph Company. Two years later, he helped
    organize a British Company - The Atlantic
    Telegraphy Company. He obtained British and
    American ships - Agamemnon and Niagara - to begin
    laying the cable.

7
Herman Hollerith Punched Card Sorter

It is often said that necessity is the mother of
invention. In the 1880s, the United States Census
Bureau had a problem. It had taken them almost
eight years to tabulate the data from the 1880
census. Federal officials worried that it would
take even longer to compile the 1890 census
results.
8
Henry Ford and the Airhibian
  • Henry Ford said - "Mark my word A combination
    airplane and motor car is coming. You may smile.
    But it will come." And he was right! Robert
    Fulton Junior, pictured seated here in his
    airphibian, devised the brilliant idea of a fly
    and drive vehicle. In his job as a government
    contract worker in the 1940s, Fulton flew his own
    aircraft to cities throughout the United States.

9
N.F. Brunham and the Tubine water wheel

Water power has been used for centuries to
perform labor saving tasks. The waterwheel a
set of paddles mounted around a wheel was an
early machine that used flowing or falling water
to create power. Persians used a wheel called a
saquia to raise water from a river to a higher
place. Ancient Greeks ground corn in waterwheel
driven mills.
10
Lowan Ray Hagie and the Corn Detasseler

When the "corn is as high as an elephant's eye"
it must be time for detasseling. If you live in
the United States' Midwestern corn-belt, chances
are that you or family members have spent a
summer walking between rows of corn plants
removing corn tassels.
11
Citations
  • http//memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpedu/features/scien
    ce/learn_more.html

12
Inventions and Their Inventors
By Kimeisha Moore
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