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  2. History of timekeeping devices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_timekeeping_devices

    There is a fusee in the earliest surviving spring-driven clock, a chamber clock made for Philip the Good in c. 1430. [109] Leonardo da Vinci , who produced the earliest known drawings of a pendulum in 1493–1494, [ 110 ] illustrated a fusee in c. 1500, a quarter of a century after the coiled spring first appeared.

  3. Bundy Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundy_Manufacturing_Company

    His family later moved to Auburn, New York, where he worked as a jeweler and invented a time clock in 1888. [1] He later obtained patents of many mechanical devices. [3] Harlow E. Bundy was born in 1856 in Auburn, New York. He was a graduate of Hamilton College. He died in 1916 in Pasadena, California, after retiring from business in 1915.

  4. LifeStraw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LifeStraw

    Use of LifeStraw. The original LifeStraw is a plastic tube 22 centimetres (8 + 5 ⁄ 8 in) long and 3 centimetres (1 + 1 ⁄ 8 in) in diameter. [8] Water that is drawn up through the straw first passes through hollow fibres that filter water particles down to 0.2 µm across, using only physical filtration methods and no chemicals.

  5. John Taylor (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Taylor_(inventor)

    John C Taylor was born on 25 November 1936 in Buxton, Derbyshire to Eric Hardman Taylor (1904-1972) and Gwendolen Marjorie Jones (1904-1975). John had one older sister, Judith Sian Taylor (1934-2011).

  6. Simon Willard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Willard

    In 1818 he invented and patented a type of mantel clock, known as the lighthouse clock and regarded as the first alarm clock produced in America. [6] Originally known as the "Patent Alarm Timepiece", they have become known as lighthouse clocks (a 20th-century term) for their obvious similarities.

  7. Eli Terry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eli_Terry

    Eli Terry Sr. (April 13, 1772 – February 24, 1852) was an inventor and clockmaker in Connecticut.He received a United States patent for a shelf clock mechanism. He introduced mass production to the art of clockmaking, which made clocks affordable for the average American citizen.

  8. Martyl Langsdorf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martyl_Langsdorf

    [4] The Doomsday Clock illustration was the only magazine cover she ever created. Both before and after that project, she painted abstract landscapes and murals . Her mural work includes an oil-on-canvas mural titled Wheat Workers for the Russell, Kansas post office, commissioned by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts , and completed in 1940.

  9. Daniel Quare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Quare

    Quare died on 21 March 1724, aged 75, at his country house at Croydon, and was buried in the Quaker burial ground, Chequer Alley, Bunhill Fields, on 27 March.The Daily Post of Thursday, 26 March, reported: "Last week dy'd Mr. Daniel Quare, watchmaker in Exchange Alley, who was famous both here and at foreign courts for the great improvements he made in that art, and we hear he is succeeded in ...

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