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Since Black history month does not allow time to talk about all of those who
made the contributions that lead to the freedoms we are afforded today. We
have compiled a list of just a small percentage of those who are buried deep in
some history books but are forgotten in others. What more fitting way to
wrap up black history month then the Black Periodic Table. The following is
a table of information in tribute to those who have in the past paved the way to
our today. This list is just a small portion of the great
African Americans who have made contributions to society. Their inventions
served as foundations for numerous ideas for the growing technological world in
which we live. We salute them for their efforts and their struggle. This
is actually known as the black periodic table because those in the list cover a
wide span in history. At URSCENE Entertainment every month is Black History
Month. We will bring you a new Black History Story each month.
The Black Periodic TableThese are just a few of
the Black elements from the past that contributed to better future for us
today. There are many others. The Struggle continues.
Benjamin Banneker was an inventor, a mathemetician, an astronomer, a
surveyor, and an essayist. As an inventor, he built a wooden clock which kept
accurate titme until he died in 1802 at the age of 75. This homemade clock is
believed to have been the first clock totaly built in America. Born free in Ellicott, Maryland, Banneker was a self-taught man who used his mathematics
skills to develop and publish a widely used almanac which was issued each year
frorm 1792 to 1806. He spent many nights studying the stars in order to make his
almanac as accurate as possible. As a surveyor, he helped lay out the streets
and buildings of Washington D.C. And as an essayist, he wrote about the evils of
slavery.
James Forten invented a device which made it easier to handle the large heavy
sails of the big ships that sialed the seas before the days of the steamship. As
a boy he loved to go down to the docks along the Delaware River and watch the
ships maneuver up to the pier to unload their cargo. He noticed how important
the expert handling of the sails was in guiding the ships. At the age of eight
he began working in a Philadelphia sail loft with his father, and some thirty
years later bought the sailmaking shop from the owner. During this time he not
only invented and perfected his device, but also learned all about the
sailmaking business. Due partly to his invention, his sail loft became one of
the most proposerous in the city.
(1852-1889)
Up in Lynn, Massachusetts, near Boston, people in the shoe business laughed
at 25-year-old Jan Ernst Matzeliger when a word got out that this former saiolr
was secretly working on a machine that could automatically make shoes, back in
the 1870's. After all, the best brains in the shoe business had invested
thousands of dollars trying to develop such a machine, and they had failed.
"Couldn't be done," they said, as they continued to make only 40 to 50
pair of shoes per day, by hand. Finally, Jam, who was good at mechanical things
decided he had developed the kind of machine needed--a machine that could make
thousands of pairs of shoes in a day. In 1883, over ten years after he had
started developing his shoe machine, Matzeliger was granted a patent on it.
GRANVILLE T. WOODS
(1856-1910)
Patents for over 35 electrical inventions were granted Granville T. Woods, of
Columbus, Ohio. Many of this electrical engineer's inventions were said to
General Electric, Westinghouse, and the Bell Telephone Companies. While Woods,
who was born in Columbus, Ohio, April 23, 1856, invented more than a dozen
devices to improve electric railway cars, and many more for controlling the flow
of electricity, his most noted invention was a system for letting the engineer
of a train know how close his train was to others. This device helped to cut
down accidents and collisions between trains. Among his other top inventions
were a steam boiler furnace and an automatic air brake used to slow or stop
trains.
NORBERT RILLIEUX
(1806-1894)
An engineer, Norbert Rillieux patented a sugar-refining process in 1864 which
revolutionized this industry. Son of a slave mother and of the master of the
plantation where he was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1806, Rillieux was
educated in France. He also taught school there at the age of 24 ears. The
sugar-refining process he developed greatly reduced the cost of producing good
sugar from sugar cane and from the sugar beet. He also published papers on the
uses of steam and on the steam engine. In 1854, because of discrimination in
Louisiana, he left that state for good, returning to France where he again turned
to engineering inventions.
ANDREW BEARD
(1849?-1921)
Andrew Beard was born a slave on a plantation in Alabama. Before he became an
inventor he was a farmer, carpenter, blacksmith, a railroad worker, and a
businessman. In 1892 he patented his first invention, a special kind of engine.
It was while working in the railroad yards that he got his idea for a device
which would automatically hold railroad cars together. This device was patented
in 1897, and became known as the "Jenny Coupler." It eliminated the
dangerous job of hooking railroad cars together by hand, and probably saved
thousands of lives and limbs of railroad workers. He improved this device in
1899, and later received $50,000 for its patent rights.
LEWIS H. LATIMER
(1848-1928)
Son of a runaway slave, Lewis Howard Latimer became an electrical engineer
who worked for Thomas A. Edison, inventor of the light bulb, and Alexander
Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone. Many of Latimer's ideas, including the
fine carbon wire which lights up, went into Edison's light bulb. Latimer was the
only African American, and one of the original 28 persons who formed the
"Edison Pioneers," a group dedicated to keeping alive Edison's ideals.
The Edison General Electric Company, for which Latimer worked, in 1892, merged
with a second firm and the new company became the present General Electric
Company. Latimer was also a noted patent expert, draftsman, author, poet and
musician.
ELIJAH McCOY
(1843-1929)
A love of machines and tools led to a lifetime career and the awarding of 57
patents to Elijah Mc Coy, son of former slaves who had fled from Kentucky to
Canada in search of freedom. Until Mc Coy developed a device which made possible
the automatic oiling of machinery used in manufacturing, companies using such
machines had to stop the machines before oiling them. Oiling of machinery
reduces the wear and tear of friction. So popular did McCoy's invention become
that person inspecting new equipment generally asked if it contained the
"real Mc Coy," meaning McCoy's oiling device. Today, "real Mc
Coy" is an expression is in the American language meaning the "real
thing.' In all, Mc Coy invented 23 oiling devices as well as many other useful
inventions. He finally set up his own manufacturing company to develop and sell
his many inventions.
GARRETT A. MORGAN
(1875-1963)
Garrett A. Morgan was a prize-winning inventor who developed a safety helmet
breathing device widely used by firemen in many American cities in the early
1900's. His invention became popular after he and his brother used it to rescue
over two dozen men who were trapped under Lake Erie, at Cleveland, Ohio, when an
explosion occurred in a tunnel which was under construction. He was awarded a
hold medal by the City of Cleveland for his heroic rescue. He later received a
gold medal at the Second International Exposition of Safety and Sanitation, in
New York, in 1914. Morgan is best remembered for his invention of the automatic
stop sign. This invention, now called the traffic or "stop light"
controls the flow of vehicles through street intersections.
GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER
(1864-1943)
Probably the best known African American scientist and inventor is George
Washington Carver, who alone, nearly revolutionized agriculture in the South. At
a time when the South's major crop-cotton-was faced with total destruction by
the boll weevil beetle, Dr. Carver, through scientific experiments showed the
South that peanuts, soybeans and sweet potatoes (yams), among other crops,
should be planted, along with cotton. Thus, if on crop failed, there would be
others from which farmers could make money. Known as "The Wizard of
Tuskegee," Dr. carver developed hundreds of products from the peanut, the
soybean, the pecan nut, the sweet potato, and even the weeds. Today, there are
many schools and other institutions named in memory of Dr. Carver.
H.C. WEBB
(1864-?)
H.C. Webb invented a machine which cleared away palmettos, an unwanted kind
of growth found in the farm fields of the southeastern region of the United
States. The device looked something like a three-wheeled plow, and was pulled by
a thirty-horsepower engine. It helped farmers to clear away as much unwanted growth
in one day as it normally took ten men 10 days to clear away-about ten
acres. The Webb Palmetto Grubbing Machine was patented in 1917. Webb also
invented a barrel stave machine and a special kind of drill press but lost the
rights to them because he did not have them patented. But, during this period,
hundreds of other African American inventors developed labor-saving devices for
which they did not receive government patents.
DANIEL H. WILLIAMS
(1858-1931)
Founder of a hospital which still exists in Chicago, medical physician Dr,
Daniel H. Williams is credited with having performed the first
"open-heart" surgery July 9, 1893, long before this kind of surgery
was developed. Dr. Williams saved the life of a knifings victim by "sewing
up his heart." Working in a makeshift operating room too small for the
six-man operating team which helped him, he opened the patient's chest, exposed
the beating heart, and stitched the knife wound a fraction of an inch from the
heart without the aid of X-rays, blood transfusions or modern "miracle
drugs." On August 2, Dr. Williams operated again to remove some fluid from
the chest cavity. On August 30, the patient walked out of the hospital, and was
known to be alive and well 20 years later.
FREDERICK M. JONES
(1893-1961)
The first African American member of the American society of Refrigeration
Engineers, Frederick M. Jones held over 60 patents in a variety of fields, 40 of
them in refrigeration equipment. In 1912, he built a sound system in a movie
theater, and was then hired by a manufacturer of movie sound systems. In 1939,
he designed the first working truck refrigerator system, which was patented in
1942. Today, such refrigerators carry fresh meats and some vegetables across the
country. Among his other inventions was the first portable X-ray machine, a
self-starting gasoline motor, and the standard refrigerator design for all Army
and Marine field kitchens. Many of the devices that deliver tickets and spill
out change at movie box offices are Jone's creations.
CHARLES H. TURNER
(1867-1923)
Charles H. Turner, who obtained a Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago
in 1907, was noted for his knowledge of ants and bees. He originated a way of
watching and recording the habits of insects and small animals, the way they act
toward one another, and the way they reacted to things that happened to them. A
type of behavior in insects is now calls "Turner's circling" after
his detailed description. Through forty-seven research papers which he published
between 1892 and 1923, he showed how humans were a lot like animals and insects,
and helped the world better understand why man acts the way he does.
MADAME C.J. WALKER
(1869-1919)
Before her invention, African American women had to straighten their hair by
placing the hair on a flat surface and then pressing it with a clothing iron.
After her invention was introduced, Sarah Breedlove Walker, who was known as
Madame C.J. Walker, became one of the first American women of any race to become
a millionaire through her own efforts. Madame Walker invented a hair softener
and a special hair-straightening comb. Before her death in 1919, Madame Walker
could count over 2,000 agents who sold her ever-growing line of Walker products
and demonstrated the "Walker System" of treating hair. Her efforts
laid the foundation for the cosmetics industry among African Americans.
ERNST E. JUST
(1883-1941)
An outstanding research biologist, Dr. Ernest E. Just devoted a lifetime of
study and function of the cell (cytology), the smallest unit of the body. His
studies included how eggs are fertilized, how babies are born, and how the cells
of animals function. In 1915, he won the Spingarn Medal, the highest award given
by the NAACP to the person having done the most during the year to advance the
process of African American people. He wrote two major books and more than
sixty scientific papers in his field. His book, The Biology of the Cell
Surface, which was used in many colleges, represented his lifetime of
research, and was published in 1939, just two years before he died.
LOUIS T. WRIGHT
(1891-1952)
A physician and surgeon, Dr. Louis T. Wright originated a method of operating
on fractures about the knee joint, a brace for fractures of the spine, and a
vaccination against smallpox, and supervised the first test of a miracle drug (aureomycin) on humans. He also advanced a new theory on the treatment of
skull fractures and engaged in early cancer research. Graduating with highest
honors from the Harvard Medical School in 1915, he was commissioned a 1st
Lieutenant in the Medical Section of the Officers Reserve Corps in 1917, and
rose to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army during World War I. In
191, he became the first African American to be appointed to a New York City
Municipal Hospital (Harlem Hospital) where he helped lower the death rate and
increase the professional standards.
WILLIAM A. HINTON
(1883-1959)
A specialist in the study and development of medicines to fight diseases, Dr.
William A. Hinton is best known for the Hinton-Davies test used to detect the
venereal disease, syphilis. In 1936, he wrote a text book on his studies, and
became recognized as one of the worlds foremost authorities on the diagnosis and
treatment of syphilis. Only three years after getting his doctor's degree from
Harvard Medical School in 1912, he was made an instructor in preventive medicine
and hygiene at his fortune university. It is said that he could have made a
fortune in private practice, but he chose to serve humanity by working in the
field of public health.
PERCY JULIAN
(1891-1975)
Finding a remedy for arthritis led to fame and fortune for Dr. Percy Julian,
a noted chemical scientist. But, more important was the fact that his discovery
made the medicine for this painful disease available to everyone at a much more
reasonable price. Dr. Julian developed a way of making the medicine from the
inexpensive American soybean instead of from the costly ingredient found in
certain parts of animals and produced in Europe. At one time, he was president
of two companies which he formed to produce this medicine. He later sold one of
the companied to a leading medicine-making (pharmaceutical) firm for several
million dollars.
THEODORE K. LAWLESS
(1892-1971)
Dr. Theodore K. Lawless was a skin specialist (dermatologist) who became a
millionaire form his studies, practice and development of medicines. He also
contributed to the better understanding of syphilis, a venereal disease; and
leprosy, a disease which wastes away the muscles of the body. Setting up his offices
in the heart of Chicago's Black community, he established one of the
largest and best known skin clinics in the city. For many years, men and women
and children, both black and white, crowded his waiting room from morning until
night. But he still found time to teach at Northwestern University, work with
the staff of Chicago's Provident Hospital, and share his knowledge with other
doctors. In 1954, he was awarded the NAACP's Spingarn Medal.
MEREDITH GOURDINE
(1929- )
head of his own manufacturing firm in New Jersey, Meredith Gourdine, an
engineering scientist , found a way to make high-voltage electricity from gas.
He and the other engineers in his company believe there are many uses for this
discovery in our everyday life. Some of them are: refrigeration for preserving
foods, supplying cheap power for heat and light in homes, burning coal more
efficiently, making sea water drinkable by taking the salt out of it, making
painting and coating processes easier, and reducing the amount of pollutants in
smoke. His company has already made an exhaust purifying device for automobiles,
devices for measuring air pollution, and generators for power stations.
J. ERNEST WILKINS, JR.
(1923- )
A mathematician, physicist and engineer, J. Ernest Wilkins, Jr. contributed
his skills mainly to the study and development of atomic power. As a teenager,
Wilkins attracted nationwide attention when he finished college at 17, earned a
masters degree on year later, and received his doctorate degree from the
University of Chicago at the age of 19. For a time, he taught college mathematics, and later worked in the University of Chicago's
metallurgical laboratory. As a relatively young man of 23, he was supplying the mathematical
formulas for the production of special space-probing telescopes. By the time he
was 27 he was part-owner of a firm which designed and developed nuclear reactors
for creating atomic power.
RUFUS STOKES
(1922-1986)
People who have breathing problems may, in the future, give credit to Rufus
Stokes for helping to ease their problem. In 1968, Mr. Stokes was granted a
patent on an air purification device which reduced the gases and ashes in smoke
to a non-dangerous and invisible level. This not only helps people, but also
improves the health of plants and animals as well as improving the appearance
and durability of buildings, cars and other things exposed to the air. After
building and successfully testing several models of his machine, Mr. Stokes, in
1973, constructed a small domestic model and a large mobile model to show that
his invention could be used in many ways.
OTIS BOYKIN
(1920-1982)
An electronic scientist and inventor, Otis Boykin devised the control unit in
artificial heart stimulators, invented a variable resistor device used in many
guided missiles, small components such as thick-film resistors used in IBM
computers, and many other devices including a burglar-proof cash register and a
chemical air filter. Starting as an assistant in a laboratory testing airplane
automatic controls, Boykin was soon developing a type of resistor now used in
many computers, radios, television sets and other electronically controlled
devices. Many products made from his discoveries are manufactured in Paris and
throughout Western Europe. One of his products was approved for use in military
hardware for the Common Market.
VANCE H. MARCHBANKS, JR.
(1905-1973)
As a Colonel and surgeon in the Air Force, Dr. Marchbanks designed a gas mask
testing device, and discovered a method of measuring fatigue in pilots who had
been involved in aircraft accidents. He also did important research in the
control of noise in carious types of airplanes. Before the first U.S. space shot
(Project Mercury) he was appointed project head physician, and was responsible
for determining the effects of space flight on man, and for collecting medical
information on the astronauts before, during and after their flight. In the
1960's as chief of environmental health services with United Aircraft
Corporation, he assisted in the designing of space suits and monitoring systems
for the Apollo moon shot.
JOHN B. CHRISTIAN
(1927- )
As a materials research engineer for the Air Force, John Christian developed
and patented a variety of revolutionary lubricants that saved pilots' lives in
combat and contributed to the success of the astronaut's mission on the moon.
The lubricants, resembling cake frosting more than oil, could withstand
temperatures ranging from minus 50 to 600 degrees. In Vietnam, when the
helicopters' oil lines were punctured by ground fire, the "soap"
lubricants enabled them toe return to their base. They were also used in the
astronaut's back-pack life support systems, without which there could have been
no moon landing, and were used in the four-wheel drive of the
"moon-buggy" making it possible to extend their moon exploration by 36
hours.
GEORGE R. CARRUTHERS
(1940- )
Astro-physicist Dr. George Carruthers was the principal scientist responsible
for the development of a special camera that made the trip to the moon aboard
the Apollo 16 in 1972. Called the "far-ultra-violet camera/spectrograph,"
the 50-pound, gold plated unit was designed to study the earth's upper atmosphere
and other interplanetary conditions. More than 200 frames of pictures were made
of eleven selected targets. In 1973, another model of the camera was made for
the Skylab 4 to take pictures of a comet speeding toward the sun. Carruthers was
interested in science as a child and built his own telescope at the age of ten.
From the age of 25, he made significant contributions to the field of electronic
imaging and space astronomy.
CHARLES W. BUGGS
(1906-1991)
A scientist and educator, Dr. Charles Buggs, of Brunswick, Georgia, conducted
special research on why some bacteria (germs) do not react to certain medicines.
In several articles, he presented his ideas on penicillin and skin grafting, and
the value of chemicals in treating bone fractures. In 1944, he contributed some
of the results of his research to the world through 12 studies he helped to
write. Three years later he wrote an important article on how to use ger-killing
chemicals (antibiotics) to prevent and cure certain diseases. he also taught
college biology, and made studies and suggestions on premedical education for
African Americans. Dr. Buggs' research and teaching contributed to a better
understanding of health and of the human body.
CHARLES. R. DREW
(1904-1950)
The storing of human blood until it is needed to save someone's life was the
major contribution of Dr. Charles Drew to science and medicine. He researched
the nature of human blood and created what has become known as "blood
banks," places where blood is kept in a special form (plasma) until needed
by injured patients. In 1940, during World War II, the British asked Dr. Drew to
establish a blood bank program for their country. After the war, he was
appointed the first director of the American Red Cross Blood Bank, supplying
plasma to the United States armed forces. He also became recognized as an
outstanding surgeon, teacher and public servant, and in 1944 was awarded the
Spingarn Medal.
| Expanded
Black Periodic Table 
| Air
Conditioning Unit |
Frederick M. Jones |
July 12,
1949 |
| Almanac |
Benjamin Banneker |
Approx. 1791 |
| Auto Cut-Off Switch |
Granville T. Woods |
January 1, 1839 |
| Auto Fishing Devise |
G. Cook |
May 30, 1899 |
| Automatic Gear Shift |
Richard Spikes |
February 28, 1932 |
| Baby Buggy |
W. H. Richardson |
June 18, 1899 |
| Bicycle Frame |
L.R. Johnson |
October 10, 1899 |
| Biscuit Cutter |
A.P. Ashbourne |
November 30, 1875 |
| Blood Plasma Bag |
Charles Drew |
Approx. 1945 |
| Cellular Phone |
Henry T. Sampson |
July 6, 1971 |
| Chamber Commode |
T. Elkins |
January 3, 1897 |
| Clothes Dryer |
G.T. Sampson |
June 6, 1862 |
| Curtain Rod |
S.R. Scratton |
November 30, 1889 |
| Curtain Rod Support |
William S. Grant |
August 4, 1896 |
| Door Stop |
O. Dorsey |
December 10, 1878 |
| Dust Pan |
Lawrence P. Ray |
August 3, 1897 |
| Egg Beater |
Willie Johnson |
February 5, 1884 |
| Electric Lampbulb |
Lewis Latimer |
March 21, 1882 |
| Elevator |
Alexander Miles |
October 11, 1867 |
| Eye Protector |
P. Johnson |
November 2, 1880 |
| Fire Escape Ladder |
J.W. Winters |
May 7, 1878 |
| Folding Bed |
L.C. Bailey |
July 18, 1899 |
| Folding Chair |
Brody & Surgwar |
June 11, 1889 |
| Fountain Pen |
W.B. Purvis |
January 7, 1890 |
| Furniture Caster |
O.A. Fisher |
1878 |
| Gas Mask |
Garrett Morgan |
October 13, 1914 |
| Golf Tee |
T. Grant |
December 12, 1899 |
| Guitar |
Robert F. Flemming,
Jr. |
March 3, 1886 |
| Hair Brush |
Lydia O. Newman |
November 15, 18-- |
| Hand Stamp |
Walter B. Purvis |
February 27, 1883 |
| Horse Shoe |
J. Ricks |
March 30, 1885 |
| Ice Cream Scooper |
A.L. Cralle |
February 2, 1897 |
| Improv. Sugar Making |
Norbet Rillieux |
December 10, 1846 |
| Insect-Destroyer Gun |
A.C. Richard |
February 28, 1899 |
| Ironing Board |
Sarah Boone |
December 30, 1887 |
| Key Chain |
F.J. Loudin |
January 9, 1894 |
| Lantern |
Michael c. Harvey |
August 19, 1884 |
| Lawn Mower |
L.A. Burr |
May 19, 1889 |
| Lemon Squeezer |
J. Thomas White |
December 8, 1893 |
| Lock |
W.A. Martin |
July 23, 18-- |
| Lubricating Cup |
Ellijah McCoy |
November 15, 1895 |
| Lunch Pail |
James Robinson |
1887 |
| Mail Box |
Paul L. Downing |
October 27, 1891 |
| Mop |
Thomas W. Stewart |
June 11, 1893 |
| Motor |
Federick M. Jones |
June 27, 1939 |
| Peanut Butter |
George
Washington Carver |
1896 |
| Pencil Sharpener |
J.L. Love |
November 23, 1897 |
| Record Player Arm |
Joseph Hunger
Dickenson |
January 8, 1819 |
| Refrigerator |
J. Standard |
June 14, 1891 |
| Riding Saddles |
W.D., Davis |
Ocotber 6, 1895 |
| Rolling Pin |
John W. Reed |
1864 |
| Shampoo Headrest |
C.O. Bailiff |
October 11, 1898 |
| Spark Plug |
Edmond Berger |
February 2, 1839 |
| Stethoscope |
Imhotep |
Ancient Egypt |
| Stove |
T.A. Carrington |
July 25, 1876 |
| Straightening Comb |
Madam C.J. Walker |
Approx. 1905 |
| Street Sweeper |
Charles B. Brooks |
March 17, 1890 |
| Phone Transmitter |
Granville T. Woods |
December 2, 1884 |
| Thermostat Control |
Frederick M. Jones |
February 23, 1960 |
| Traffic Light |
Garrett Morgan |
November 20, 1923 |
| Tricycle |
M.A. Cherry |
May 6, 1886 |
| Typewriter |
Burridge &
Marshman |
April 7, 1885 |
Other Things Invented By Blacks:
Chess - Super Water Blaster - Fiber Optics
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