Inventors and Scientists
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[ Biographies (256) ]
[ Experiments (25) ]
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Alexander Graham Bell’s Path to the Telephone
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Alexander Graham Bell Notebook Projects
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Alexander Graham Bell: The Inventor
"Although the telephone is Bell’s most famous invention, it is not, by a long shot, his only invention. "Alexander Graham Bell’s first invention, a device for cleaning wheat, was developed when he was just eleven years old. At the age of 75, a year before his death, he received a patent on the fastest water craft in the world: the HD-4. Between these two inventions, Bell’s fertile brain formulated hundreds of new concepts." Air conditioning, CD-ROMS, and solar heating panels are a few of the many modern conveniences that can be traced to Bell."
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Alexander Graham Bell Family Papers
"This Library of Congress exhibit currently contains 1400 items documenting Bell’s invention of the telephone and his involvement in the first telephone company. It will eventually triple in size. "Included among Bell’s papers is his experimental notebook containing the entry from March 10, 1876, describing the first successful experiment with the telephone, during which he spoke through the instrument to his assistant the famous words, Mr. Watson -- Come here -- I want to see you.’""
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About: Inventors
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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"Menlo Park in Edison, New Jersey"
"The Thomas Alva Edison Memorial Tower and Menlo Park Museum were built in 1937 on the exact spot of Edison’s original research and development lab, where he earned over 400 patents for inventions such as the incandescent light bulb, the phonograph and the electric railroad car. In fact, the online museum focuses on these three particular inventions, but is also chock full of odd tidbits such as a page titled ""Yum! What Did Edison Eat?"""
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