American Industrial Revolution

705 Words2 Pages

The American Industrial Revolution had many great innovations to help aid many things from travel to entertainment. There was the invention of the transcontinental railroad, the telephone, the phonograph, the light bulb, and the motion picture camera to name a few. And I personally think those few are the greatest innovations of that time period. They paved the way for the future of our country.
The transcontinental railroad was finished on May, 10 1896. The next day the first transcontinental freight left California towards the east coast. It was transporting a shipment of Japanese teas. After a few days passenger service was available on May, 15. Travelers no longer had to worry about the dangers of traveling by ocean. Travelers could travel …show more content…

They built the Strip Kinetograph. It was an early movie camera. There was a strip of long flexible film that was used for a regular camera. Because of it’s flexibility it could wrap around a spool. The machine took pictures so fast that they looked as if they were moving. After this him and his team built the Kinescope so they could watch the movies. Only one person at a time could go and watch the twenty to thirty second film for five cents. But Edison wasn’t the only person to work on motion picture cameras. Thomas Armat and Francis Jenkins invented the Phantascope in 1896. This allowed the movie to be shown on a screen so that a roomful of people could enjoy the movie all at once.
Those are the inventions that I personally thought were the most innovative during the Industrial revolution. They paved the way for us and we have only improved on what they did. The railroad allowed easier travel and transport, the telephone made communication easier, the phonograph allowed us to record music and books for blind people, the light bulb gave us a more sufficient way of using electricity, and the motion picture camera made it possible to make movies for people to enjoy and to record important things in

Open Document