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technological innovations from the industrial revolution
technological innovations from the industrial revolution
industrial revolution inventions
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Garrett A. Morgan
Garrett Augustus Morgan was born in 1877 in Paris, Kentucky. He dropped out of school at the age of 14 and moved to Cleveland Ohio where he began working at a sewing-machine shop. He became interested in the improvement of machines and designed a belt fastener for the sewing machine, which he sold for $150.
In 1909, Morgan opened a clothing manufacturing company and continued to invent new devices. Morgan was interested in workers’ safety. He invented a safety hood, called an “inhalator,” which he patented in 1912 (patent #1,113,675). This device was an early version of the gas mask. He won the grand prize for the invention in 1914 at the second International Exposition of Safety and Sanitation.
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On July 25, 1916, a tunnel was being built in Cleveland, under Lake Erie, to create a shortcut for the congested traffic conditions in the city. During construction, explosions ripped throughout the tunnel. Efforts to rescue the wounded were hampered by the smoke, dust and stifling natural gas, and many firefighters and tunnel workers died. Morgan and his brother were asked to assist in the rescue mission. They used the safety hoods, which filtered the air, and ventured into the tunnel that was 5 miles out and 282 feet under Lake Erie. They and other volunteers were able to rescue the wounded using the gas masks. The City of Cleveland awarded the Morgan brothers a gold medal for their heroism and use of Garrett’s life saving invention. After Morgan’s success with the gas mask, he received many orders from fire departments, chemists, miners and engineers. Unfortunately due to racism, when it was discovered that Morgan was African American, many orders for his device were cancelled. In order to sell his device, Morgan resorting to hiring a white man to impersonate him.
Morgan did not let prejudice against him stop his efforts to invent devices to make the world a safer place. In 1920, the use of the automobiles increased, causing traffic congestion in many of the large U.S. cities. In 1923, Morgan designed and patented a traffic signal (patent #1,475,024). The signal consisted of a tall post with movable arms that monitored and controlled traffic. The post rotated and the arms moved up. The signal contained lights that flashed the words ”stop” and “go.
Garrett Augustus Morgan was born on March 4, 1877 in Paris, Kentucky, the seventh of eleven children to Sydney and Elizabeth Morgan. His parents had previously been slaves, freed by the Emancipation Proclamation. At the early age of 14, Morgan decided to travel north to Ohio in the hopes of receiving better education opportunities. During those times, there were better opportunities for blacks in the northern part of the country. Still, Morgan’s formal education never surpassed elementary school. He moved to Cincinnati and then to Cleveland, working as a handyman in order to make ends meet. In Cleveland, he learned the inner workings of the sewing machine and in opened his own sewing machine store in 1907, where he both sold new machines and repaired old ones. In 1908 Morgan married Mary Anne Hassek with whom he later had three sons.
In "the fire-breather" by Tod Olson, Garrett Morgan is testing his one of his many life changing inventions, to show the world that he was willing to put his life at risk to prove to people that he was confident in his invention. He did the craziest things to get people to buy his mask. An example from the article is "he would step into a tent containing a toxic mix of burning tar, sulfur, formaldehyde, and manure." (Olson 27) That is a very dangerous stunt to pull, just to prove that his invention worked. He even saved lives in a stunt and could have died, all just to show his confidence in his invention. In the article, it says that he went down into a tunnel with toxic gas wearing nothing but his pajamas and his mask. (Olson 28) It is not
He then opened his own tailoring shop with new wife Mary Anne Hassek whom he had met a few years after his divorce. Together they had three sons; John Pierpont, Garrett Augustus, Jr., and Cosmo Henry. During 1898, he began assessing the problems that occur when sewing specific types of wool which led to the creation of his chemical solution to stop the scorching of the wool. He tested it on a neighbour’s dog and after succeeding he began selling it to others and established G. A Morgan Hair Refining Company. In 1914, after securing financial success, Mr. Morgan had gotten patented for what is known as the first gas mask. Since he was African American no one wanted to buy his invention, so he had hired a white man to act as the creator while he portrayed as the assistant and his plan worked. His design became a prototype for the first gas mask used in World War I and he won the first prize at the Second International Exposition of Safety and Sanitation. Unfortunately, after his sponsors had found out that he was the actual creator they back out due to his race, nevertheless Garrett Morgan had pushed through and continued to be a hope for all people. After witnessing a terrible accident caused by confusion at an intersection, he created a traffic signal which led him to receive a patent, but he sadly sold the rights to General Electric for
On July 18, 1984 one of America’s most horrific and shocking killings took place in San Ysidro, California. A man originally from Ohio committed the fourth-deadliest shooting massacre by a single perpetrator in United States history, killing twenty-one and wounding nineteen others. The “McDonald’s Massacre”, as it came to be called, was a tragic event in a San Ysidro McDonalds.
The gas mask, ever wondered who invented it? If not, then what about the traffic light? Well, Garrett A Morgan invented both of them. You may not have heard of him simply because Morgan been buried under and never spoken of simply because Morgan was a minority back when racism and sexism were extremely common. So they basically never talked about him inventing anything, and now not many people know about him. Both of his inventions are one of the greatest inventions to date.
George Washington Carver was born in 1864 and it was a time that was very different from today. Carver was born a slave in the state of Missouri. George Washington Carver was a great chemist among many other talents, but his early life was very difficult.His parents were Mary and Giles who were
One of the most colorful characters of the Civil War was a General named William T. Sherman. During the period of the war (1861-1865), General Sherman went full circle from being forced to retire on trumped up charges that he was insane, to becoming a key player in bringing this bloody war to a close. He entered the annals of military history as one of the greatest and most distinguished generals of all time.
Franklin W. McCormack, a medical x-ray technician from San Francisco, California was born in Illinois in 1882. He married a girl from Missouri named Anna G before moving to California. According to a 1920 United States Census Mr. and Mrs. McCormack had two children, Donald and Marjorie. McCormack was the first to put the paralleling technique into use in intraoral dental radiography. In 1911 he opened one of the first dental x-ray lab in San Francisco, California. He hand wrapped dental films in black paper, to add support he placed a metal plate with the films and then wrapped both in wax paper to put in the patient’s mouth.
Vault Design Group. "Traffic Light History - Invention of the Traffic Light." The Great Idea
John H. Johnson was born January 19, 1918 in rural Arkansas City, Arkansas. His parents were Leroy Johnson and Gertrude Jenkins Johnson. His father was killed in a sawmill accident when little John was eight years old. He attended the community's overcrowded, segregated elementary school. In the early 1930s, there was no public high school for African-Americans in Arkansas. His mother heard of better opportunities for African-Americans in Chicago and saved her meager earnings as a washerwoman and a cook and for years until she could afford to move her family to Chicago. This resulted in them becoming a part of the African-American Great Migration of 1933. There, Johnson was exposed to something he never knew existed, middle class black people.
Ulysses S Grant was an iconic figure in the Civil War and was well known for his astounding feats throughout the war.(World book Advanced) While Ulysses S. Grant is the name he is most commonly known as, his real name is Hiram Ulysses Grant and the S. stands for nothing.(Ulysses S. Grant Homepage) Ulysses graduated from West Point with high marks in Horsemanship and Mathematics, but he had poor grades in classes like French. Grant fell in love with his roommate's sister Julia Dent, but sadly he was called to serve at the start of the Mexican War. Once the war was over he was soon positioned in the West, away from his family. When Ulysses left the army, he tried, and failed, at several walks of life, like farming, before the Civil War.
Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey was born in February of 1818 in Maryland to a slave woman and a white man. 1 He was separated from his mother as an infant and the only thing that he knew for sure about his father was that he was white, although he thought it was a possibility that his father could have been his master. 2 He stayed with his aunt and grandparents when he was a young child until being sent to a ship carpenter in Baltimore for the next eight years of this life. 3 It was in Baltimore that Frederick learned to read and it was also there that he first heard about abolitionists. 4 After those seven years, he was sent back to the country where he worked for a slave owner and was constantly beaten and starved. 5 This horrible treatment led Frederick to want to escape, which he was finally able to do in 1838 when he fled to New York City where he married and changed his name to Frederick Douglass. 6 Soon after, he settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts. 7
In 1854 Otis dramatized his safety device on the floor of the Crystal Palace Exposition in New York. With a large audience on hand, the inventor ascended in an elevator cradled in an open-sided shaft. Halfway up, he had the hoisting cable cut with an axe. The platform held up and the elevator industry was good to go. This safety device changed the face of the globe by making things move up and down easily. This helped make skyscrapers a reality.
G. Carter Bentley’s practice theory is a popular approach in understanding how ethnicity is constructed and ethnic identity is maintained. Here we shift from boundaries to focus on people’s patterns of experiences, both objective and subjective. Bentley draws on Bordieu’s concepts of "habitus" and "practice". Bordieu argues that the objective conditions, mediated by systems of symbolic representations, generate in different persons dispositions to act in different ways (Bentley 1987: 28) Habitus compromises "…a set of generative schemes that produce practices and representations that are regular without reference to overt rules and that are goal directed without requiring conscious selection of goals or mastery of methods achieving them." (as quoted in Bentley, Ibid.,). Hence habits become a mechanic way of being, acting and thinking, developed through 1) social practices, 2) shared experiences, 3) experimentation and 4) comprehension of those relationships or difference at both the conscious and unconscious levels. There is constant interplay between these levels (collectively and individually).
How would you feel if you were a new student and knew no one in your new school or anything about the school? The idea of this program is to help kids learn about the school and the people here. This program would help the new people learn the routine and the way things are done around the school. I believe we should have this ambassador program to help the new students that come to our school get used to it and make them feel as they belong.