enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Thomas Edison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Edison

    Edison in 1861. Thomas Edison was born in 1847 in Milan, Ohio, but grew up in Port Huron, Michigan, after the family moved there in 1854. [8] He was the seventh and last child of Samuel Ogden Edison Jr. (1804–1896, born in Marshalltown, Nova Scotia) and Nancy Matthews Elliott (1810–1871, born in Chenango County, New York).

  3. The Telephone Cases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Telephone_Cases

    The Telephone Cases, 126 U.S. 1 (1888), were a series of U.S. court cases in the 1870s and the 1880s related to the invention of the telephone, which culminated in an 1888 decision of the U.S. Supreme Court that upheld the priority of the patents belonging to Alexander Graham Bell.

  4. Edisonian approach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edisonian_approach

    Historian Thomas Hughes (1977) describes the features of Edison's method. In summary, they are: Hughes says, "In formulating problem-solving ideas, he was inventing; in developing inventions, his approach was akin to engineering; and in looking after financing and manufacturing and other post-invention and development activities, he was innovating."

  5. How the 173-year-old glassmaker behind Edison’s light bulb ...

    www.aol.com/finance/173-old-glass-maker-behind...

    A photo of the original purchase order from Thomas Edison to Corning for the glass encasement for Edison’s lightbulb in 1880. CEO Wendell Weeks keeps the purchase order framed in his office as a ...

  6. Elisha Gray and Alexander Bell telephone controversy

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisha_Gray_and_Alexander...

    Alexander Graham Bell was a professor of elocution at Boston University and tutor of deaf children. He had begun electrical experiments in Scotland in 1867 and, after emigrating to Boston from Canada, pursued research into a method of telegraphy that could transmit multiple messages over a single wire simultaneously, a so-called "harmonic telegraph".

  7. Kinetoscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinetoscope

    Edison would take full credit for the invention, but the historiographical consensus is that the title of creator can hardly go to one man: While Edison seems to have conceived the idea and initiated the experiments, Dickson apparently performed the bulk of the experimentation, leading most modern scholars to assign Dickson with the major ...

  8. George Sweigert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Sweigert

    George H. Sweigert (1920–1999) is credited as the first inventor to patent the cordless telephone. [1]Born in Akron, Ohio, Sweigert served five years in the US Army as a radio operator in World War II in Guadalcanal, Bougainville, Fiji and New Georgia assigned to the 145th Headquarters Company under the 37th Infantry Division (United States).

  9. Edison Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edison_Manufacturing_Company

    Edison's films were made by the Kinetograph Department of the Edison Manufacturing Company. [4] Edison's first moviemaking studio—and also the world's first—was the "Black Maria" in West Orange, New Jersey, where production of Kinetoscope films began in early 1893.