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1
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2
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- The learner will be able to
understand the development of Industrial America.
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3
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- Make notes about each inventor and his invention during the
presentation.
- At the end of the presentation there will be writing directions.
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4
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- Since 1790 the United States Patent Office has granted more than 6
million patents.
- The number of patents issued increased dramatically during the 19th
century, stimulated by the American industrial revolution and further
fueling it.
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5
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- The middle and late 19th century was a golden age for American
invention.
- The technology envisioned by American inventors has improved our
standard of living and linked us across physical and cultural divides.
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6
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7
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8
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- George Washington Carver was born into slavery.
- By the late 1890s, after overcoming poverty and racial discrimination,
he became the director of agricultural teaching and research at
Alabama's Tuskegee Institute.
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9
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- Carver discovered more than 450 products that could be made from the
peanut and other cultivated plants.
- He made it possible for many Southern farmers to diversify their crops,
and became known as "the miracle worker" throughout the South.
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10
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- Thomas Edison developed a practical light bulb toward the end of 1879.
- In 1880 he designed this version, the first to have all the essential
features of a modern light bulb--an incandescent filament in an
evacuated glass bulb with a screw base.
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11
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- Creating a successful filament was the most critical factor.
- For it to be practical, it had to glow when an electric current passed
through it, possess high electrical resistance, and last a long time.
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12
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- By the time German-born Albert Einstein was 30, his theory of relativity
and work in quantum mechanics had set off a revolution in physics.
- Fleeing Nazi Germany in 1933, he came to the United States.
- He spent the rest of his career at the Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton, New Jersey.
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13
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- In 1939 he warned President Roosevelt that Germany was moving toward
developing nuclear weaponry and urged that this country do the same,
inspiring the Manhattan Project.
- Having paved the way for this new weapon with his warning and own
discoveries, Einstein devoted much time in later years working for
nuclear arms control.
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14
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15
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16
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- The telegraph key Samuel Morse used on his first line in 1844 was very
simple--a strip of spring steel that could be pressed against a metal
contact.
- Alfred Vail, Morse's partner, designed this key, in which the gap was
more easily adjustable because of changes in its spring tension.
- It was used on the expanding telegraph system, perhaps as early as the
fall of 1844 and certainly by 1845.
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17
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18
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- Isaac Merritt Singer was the most flamboyant of 19th-century sewing
machine inventors, having sharpened his skills as an actor before
becoming an inventor.
- Around 1850, he began concentrating on improving an existing sewing
machine. Success followed quickly.
- This 1853 model is a commercial sewing machine.
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19
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- The patent claims were for the methods of feeding the cloth, regulating
the tension on the needle thread, and lubricating the needle thread so
that leather could be sewn.
- The development of practical sewing machines contributed to the growth
of the ready-made clothing industry in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries.
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20
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- The invention of the personal computer is having an effect on our lives
equal to, if not greater than, that of the electric light bulb,
telegraph, and telephone.
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21
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- The Altair was the most popular early personal computer. It was
programmed by flipping switches on the front panel. Its output was
simply a pattern of lights.
- Communications, word processing, and other applications required
additional components.
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22
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