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Anna Baldwin (1832-1888) was an American dairy farmer and inventor. She operated a dairy farm in Newark, New Jersey who was most famous for her Hygienic Glove Milker, patented on February 18, 1879. Background
Anna Baldwin (fl 1860s), milk production; Alice Pike Barney (1857–1931), mechanical devices; Janet Emerson Bashen (born 1957), software; Patricia Bath (born 1942), medical devices; Maria Beasley (fl 1870s–1890s), barrel hooper, life rafts; Ruth Benedict (1887–1948), anthropology; Ruth R. Benerito (1916–2013), cotton fabrics
The hot comb was an invention developed in France as a way for women with coarse curly hair to achieve a fine straight look traditionally modeled by historical Egyptian women. [44] However, it was Annie Malone who first patented this tool, while her protégé and former worker, Madam C. J. Walker , widened the teeth.
The 3 tine fork has a larger, flattened and beveled tine on the side while the 4 tine fork has the 1st and 2nd tine connected or bridged together and beveled. On July 7, 1891, Anna M. Mangin of Queens, a borough of New York City, filed the first patent for the pastry fork. U.S. patent #470,005 was later issued on March 1, 1892. [25]
A. Samuel Abbot; Frank Abbott (dentist) Edward Goodrich Acheson; Isaac Adams Jr. Isaac Adams (inventor) Timothy Alden (inventor) Charles Alderton; Cyrus Alger
Anna Connelly was an American woman who lived from the mid-19th century to the mid-20th century in Pennsylvania. She was the inventor of the predecessor of the modern outdoor fire escape; her invention saved lives, causing it to become a safety component in modern buildings. In addition, she was one of the first women in the US to submit a ...
Sorokin is the subject of Netflix's "Inventing Anna," a partly fictionalized retelling of how a young Russian woman posing as a German heiress named Anna Delvey conned New York's elite out of ...
In 1875, he married Anna Baldwin Sedgwick, daughter of influential lawyer and politician Charles Baldwin Sedgwick. He had a prolific practice and at one point had three simultaneously operating offices. He had offices in Syracuse (1875–1885), Buffalo (Silsbee & Marling, 1882–1887), and Chicago (Silsbee and Kent, 1883–1884). From 1883 to ...