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American Science and Invention: A Pictorial History

American Science and Invention: A Pictorial History. Summary by David E. Goldberg Department of General Engineering University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Urbana, IL 61801. Text. Wilson, M. (195x). American science and invention. New York, NY: Bonanza Books.

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American Science and Invention: A Pictorial History

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  1. American Science and Invention: A Pictorial History Summary by David E. Goldberg Department of General Engineering University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Urbana, IL 61801

  2. Text • Wilson, M. (195x). American science and invention. New York, NY: Bonanza Books. • Author novelist and assistant to Enrico Fermi.

  3. Organization • Giants in the wilderness: • The shock of freedom: • Bright dream—dark fulfillment • The tools of war • The new era • Last individualists • The new dimension

  4. Boundaries of America • Awareness of the wilderness. • Common thread throughout the colonies. • English laws against manufacture.

  5. Trades • American trades no where as skilled as European. • Jack of all trades because of extent of the market. • Yankee ingenuity unknown in colonies. • Fishing/Whaling • Ship and sailmaking: 2000 privateers/90,000men

  6. American Men of Science • Franklin: Electrical work known worldwide. • Ben Thompson: Lord Rumford, modern fireplace. • Joseph Priestley: Oxygen.

  7. Surveyors of Land and Sea • Lewis and Clark • 1803: Ratification of Louisiana Purchase. • Collected specimens but lost • Nathaniel Bowditch • New practical navigator (1802) • Lunar navigation

  8. Engineers & Inventors • Military meaning: men who erected engines of war, catapults, storming towers, fortifications. • Mechanical philosophy & mechanics • Craftsmen respected. • Inventors considered lunatics

  9. Fitch before Fulton • Oar driven steamboat in 1790s: John Fitch of CT • Tried sidewheels, screw. • Died in despair. • Fulton: Katherine of Clermont

  10. Oliver Evans • Developed reduced size steam engine in which steam pushed (rather than condensed as in Newcomen engine).

  11. Stevens Dynasty • John Stevens and Robert Livingston (brother-in-law) • Worked on railroad and improved steam engines. • Fulton’s folly: Clermont, 150ft long, 18 ft beam, 100 tons

  12. Erie Canal • Doomed by railroad. • Wealth of New York as harbor to inland. • First engineering school of US. • Profession of Civil Engineering born in states • Canvass White found hydraulic cement: concrete for use in canal.

  13. Eli Whitney • Cotton gin: spurred growth of cotton and reinvigorated slavery. • Slave price doubled after gin. • Whitney not compensated.

  14. Mass Production • Whitney • Rifle assembly from standardized parts. • First milling machine. • 8 years to fill order for 10,000 rifles. • Order for 15,000 more (1811) in two years • Samuel Slater • Imported English textile factory • Reproduced machinery from memory.

  15. Long & Morton: Anasthesia • Crawford Long discovered anasthetic use of ether in 1840s. • Did not publish • William Thomas Green Morton, 1846.

  16. Joseph Henry: • Induction of electricity in wire caused by moving magnetic field. • First electric motor, telegraph (ahead of Morse) 1831 • Understood electromagnetics as wave phenomenon. • Director of Smithsonian.

  17. Yankee Ingenuity • New heroes: men of inventiveness. • Patent law of 1838, notion of patent search. • Legend grew after 1830s or so.

  18. Telegraph Takes Off • Samuel Morse: Early demo 1837, 1700 feet of wire. • Backer Stephen Vail, $2000, if son Alfred could be assistant. • Vail worked out many of Morse’s details. • DC to Baltimore test case.

  19. Early 1800s Hall of Fame • Charles Goodyear: Vulcanization of rubber. • Walter Hunt sewing machine and safety pin. • Elias Howe’s & Isaac Singer reinvented the sewing machine.

  20. Agriculture Equipment • John Deere, 1833, first steel plow. • Robert & Cyrus McCormick: demo of reaper machine in 1831 • Sold first two machine 1841, 1000 in 1851. • Legal problems. Widespread copying.

  21. Transportation • The railroads. Stevens family. • Clipper ships: American ships held most speed records. John Griffiths. • Lightning record to Liverpool in 19.5 hours (18.5 knots) 1854.

  22. Forge, Pan, and Derrick • Iron: Henry Bessemer and William Kelly (Kentucky). Air bubbled through, results in high grade steel. • Kelly perfected process in 1851, 6 years before Bessemer. • Kelly assigned patent to father-in-law, wife withheld it for his own good.

  23. Gold • James Marshall building sawmill noticed yellow mineral in 1848. • Gold rush was on. • Clipper ships and wagon trains brought new people to west.

  24. Oil • Needed a substitute for expensive whale oil. • E. L. Drake partner of Bissell and Eveleth. • Invented modern method of drilling. • Struck oil in 1859.

  25. War Tools • Telegraph • Balloons • Gatling gun • Iron ships • Torpedoes • Submarines

  26. Big Business Cometh • George Pullman dining and sleeping cars 1858, after raising Chicago.. • Refrigerator Cars: George Henry Hammond had a car built in 1867. • Farm equipment revisited: • Machine tools.

  27. More, more, more • Typewriter, C. L. Sholes 1867, to Remington in 1873. • Air brakes: widespread collisions, George Westinghouse, at age 23. • Photography: George Eastman

  28. Invention of the R&D Lab • Thomas A. Edison, • Newark (1870) • Menlo Park 1876) • Phone improvements • Lightbulb • Phonograph

  29. Invention of the Assembly Line

  30. Triodes before Transistors • Lee De Forest 1873- • Triode or audion • Oscillators and amplifiers depended on it.

  31. Bell and the Telephone • 1875 accident on harmonic telegraph. • Bell lived 1847-1922

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