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Great Inventors and Their Inventions

Audiobook

Great Inventors and Their Inventions

Frank P. Bachman

This book is about Great inventors and what they created. It has different stories like Alexander Bell, Wrights, Morse, Gutenberg, and Edison. ON August 17, 1807, a curious crowd of people in New York gathered at a boat landing. Tied to the dock was a strange-looking craft. A smokestack rose above the deck. From the sides of the boat, there stood out queer shaped paddle wheels. Of a sudden, the clouds of smoke from the smokestack grew larger, the paddle wheels turned, and the boat, to the astonishment of all, moved. It was "Fulton's Folly," the Clermont, on her first trip to Albany.

The first boat used by man was probably the trunk of a fallen tree, moved about by means of a broken branch or pole. Then some savage saw that a better boat could be made by tying a number of logs together to make a raft. But rafts are hard to move, so the heart of a log was hollowed out by means of a stone ax or fire, to make a still better boat, or strips of birch bark were skillfully fastened together to form a graceful canoe. Boats were constructed also of rough-hewn boards. With such primitive craft, voyages of hundreds of miles were made up and down great rivers like the Mississippi, or along the shores of inland seas like the Great Lakes.

The Phœnicians were the first great sailors. Their boats, called galleys, were sometimes two to three hundred feet long. These were of two kinds, merchantmen and war vessels. The merchantmen were propelled partly by sails and partly by oars, but on the war vessels, when in battle, oars only were used. On a single boat there were often several hundred oarsmen or galley slaves. These galley slaves were as a rule prisoners of war. They were chained to the oar benches, and to force them to row, they were often beaten within an inch of their lives. In enormous sail-and-oar vessels the Phœnicians crossed the Mediterranean in every direction, pushed out into the Atlantic Ocean, and went as far north as England.

The chief improvement in boat making, from the time of the Phœnicians until the first trip of the Clermont, was to do away with oars and to use sails only. - Summary by Elijah Fisher

Year of Publication: 1918Genres: Technology & Engineering , Biography & Autobiography
Running Time: 05 hours 56 minutes 46 seconds
#Chapter Name
1
The Nights
Preface
PNWDAN509
1:49
2
The Nights
James Watt and the Invention of the Steam Engine
PNWDAN509
23:40
3
The Nights
Robert Fulton and the Invention of the Steamboat
PNWDAN509
31:03
4
The Nights
George Stephenson & Invention of the Locomotive
PNWDAN509
31:01
5
The Nights
Invention of the Electric Engine
PNWDAN509
19:50
6
The Nights
The Invention of the Spinning Machines
MaryAnn
18:54
7
The Nights
Eli Whitney & the Invention of the Cotton Gin
Maggie Travers
24:56
8
The Nights
Elias Howe & the Invention of the Sewing Machine
MaryAnn
26:15
9
The Nights
Cyrus H. McCormick and the Invention of the Reaper
MaryAnn
23:04
10
The Nights
Henry Bessemer and the Making of Steel
Linda Andrus
38:45
11
The Nights
John Gutenberg and the Invention of Printing
Linda Andrus
29:41
12
The Nights
Samuel F. B Morse & the Invention of the Telegraph
Scott Bennett
31:41
13
The Nights
Alexander Graham Bell & Invention of the Telephone
Jesse Zuba
25:30
14
The Nights
Thomas A. Edison
Maggie Travers
7:32
15
The Nights
Orville and Wilbur Wright
Maggie Travers
9:13
16
The Nights
Guglielmo Marconi
PNWDAN509
5:47
17
The Nights
John P. Holland
Maggie Travers
8:05

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