Inventing Fun, Facts & Trivia
Next
Previous
Contents
Fascinating Facts About Famous Inventions
Did you know:
- that a workman who left
the soap mixing machine on too long
was responsible for making Ivory Soap?
He was so embarrassed by his mistake
that he threw the mess in a stream.
Imagine his dismay when the evidence
of his error floated to the surface!
Result: Ivory soap, the soap that floats.
- that the Band-Aid\(rg Bandage
was invented by a Johnson & Johnson employee
whose wife had cut herself?
Earl Dickson's wife was rather accident prone,
so he set out to develop a bandage
that she could apply without help.
He placed a small piece of gauze
in the center of a small piece of surgical tape,
and what we know today as the Band Aid bandage was born!
- that the inventor of the World Wide Web,
British-born Tim Berners-Lee,
never made money on his invention,
which revolutionized the computer world?
In 1989 he envisioned a way to link documents
on the Internet using "hypertext"
so "surfers" could jump from one document
to another through highlighted words.
Berners-Lee decided not to patent his technology
since he feared that, if he did patent it,
use of the Web would be too expensive
and would therefore not become used worldwide.
He therefore passed up a fortune
so the world could learn and communicate.
- that Robert Adler has the dubious distinction
of being the Father of the Couch Potato?
Back in 1955 Adler was employed
by what was then Zenith Radio Corp.,
where he was charged to invent something
that would allow viewers to turn down the TV volume
without leaving their chairs.
After a series of flops
(such as a wired contraption that people tripped over),
Adler hit on the idea of using sound waves.
Thus the Remote Control was born...
and some viewers haven't moved since!
- that in 1879 Auguste Bartholdi
received a design patent for the Statue of Liberty?
- that Galileo invented the thermometer in 1593?
- that the first ballpoint pen was invented
by Hungarian journalist Lasalo Biro
and his chemist brother, Georg, in 1938?
- that power steering was invented
by independent inventor Francis W. Davis?
As chief engineer in the 1920s of the truck division
of the Pierce Arrow Motor Car Company,
he saw how hard it was to steer heavy vehicles.
So that he would be able to keep the profits
from his future invention,
Davis left his job,
rented a small engineering shop in Waltham, Mass.,
and developed a hydraulic power steering system
that led to power steering.
- that it was melting ice cream
that inspired the invention of the outboard motor?
It was a lovely August day
and Ole Evinrude was rowing his boat
to his favorite island picnic spot.
As he rowed, he watched his ice cream melt
and wished he had a faster way to get to the island.
At that moment the idea for the outboard motor was born!
- that two musicians were responsible
for the invention of color print film?
Fascinated by photography,
Leopold Godowsky and Leopold Mannes
worked together to produce
an easy-to-use, practical color film.
They worked full time as music teachers and gave concerts
while experimenting during their off hours in Mannes' kitchen.
Their success earned them full-time,
well-paying jobs at Kodak
and their efforts resulted in Kodachrome film,
which was introduced in 1935.
- that when British merchant Peter Durand
invented the metal can in 1810,
he completely overlooked the need
for a device to open it?
Believe it or not,
some historians contend that the bayonet
was invented not as a tool of war but as a can opener!
- that the telescope was accidentally discovered
in 1698 when Dutch eye glass maker Hans Lippershey
looked through two lenses --
one held in front of the other --
and realized that the image was magnified?
- that one person who claimed to be
the inventor of the television
is Russian emigre Vladimir Zworykin?
In 1929 David Sarnoff, founder of RCA,
asked Zworykin what it would take
to develop TV for commercial use.
He said: a year and a half and $100,000.
In reality, it took 20 years and $50 million!
Before his death in 1982 at the age of 92,
Zworykin said of his invention:
"The technique is wonderful.
It is beyond my expectations.
But the programs!
I would never let my children even come close to this thing."
- that the formulas for Cola-Cola and Silly Putty
have never been patented?
These trade secrets are shared
only with selected trustworthy company employees,
and while there have been many attempts
to duplicate these products,
so far, no one has been successful.
- that Benjamin Franklin invented bifocals
because he hated wearing two pairs of glasses?
- that several people are credited with the invention
of the flush toilet?
Most people have heard of Thomas Crapper (1837-1910),
the sanitary engineer who invented the valve-and-siphon arrangement
that made the modern toilet possible.
Another claimant to "the throne"
was British inventor Alexander Cumming
who patented a toilet in 1775.
Then there's a nameless Minoan (a native of ancient Crete)
who lived 4,000 years ago who supposedly was ahead of his time
and created the first flush toilet!
- that after Parker Brothers executives
turned down the game of Monopoly
because it had "52 fundamental errors"
(including taking too long to play),
a copy of the game wound up in the home
of the company president who stayed up until 1 a.m.
to finish playing it?
He was so impressed by the game
that the next day he wrote to inventor Charles Darrow
and offered to buy it!
- that the first rickshaw was invented in 1869
by an American Baptist minister,
the Rev. E. Jonathan Scobie,
to transport his invalid wife around the streets of Yokohama?
- that to encourage use of his new invention, the shopping cart,
market owner Sylvan Goldman hired fake shoppers
to push the carts around his store in Oklahoma City?
Seems his customers were reluctant
to give up their hand-carried baskets.
- that the trademarked name "Baby Ruth"
was inspired by President Grover Cleveland's daughter, Ruth,
and not by Babe Ruth?
- that J.B. Dunlop, one inventor of the pneumatic tire,
was a veterinary surgeon?
- that Thomas Edison's patent application on his phonograph
was approved by the Patent Office in just seven weeks?
In contrast, it took Gordon Gould, the inventor of the laser,
30 years to obtain his patent -- finally awarded in 1988!
- that the first Apple computer was born
in Steve Jobs' parents' garage?
College students Jobs and his partner Steve Wozniak
worked furiously in that garage assembling computers
for fellow students and were totally unprepared
for their first commercial order for 50 computers.
To raise the needed $1300 for parts,
Jobs sold his old VW bus
and Wozniak sold his Hewlett Packard calculator.
The next year -- 1977 -- Apple sales hit $800,000
and went on to become a Fortune 500 company
in a record five years!
- that "patent leather" got its name
because the process of applying the polished black finish
to leather was once patented?
Next
Previous
Contents
|