Now let's add to our current discussion...
See this video, makes me think. Rap music is an innovation?
Question to ponder. But, now, let's return to giving Granville Woods our special attention.
B.J. Nolan, Tennessee patent lawyer said:
“I never knew a Negro to even suggest a new idea. Much less try to patent one. And I have dealt with them all my life. P.S. I have asked other lawyers around me for data of Negro inventions. And they take it as a joke.”
Com Technologist: Granville Woods
- 1884: Inventor of improved telephone transmitter
- 1885: Inventor of telegraphony
- 1887: Inventor of induction telegraph
35+ other patents
Why not mentioned in history books along side Edison, Bell, etc.?
Granville Woods: His story
- Sometimes called the “Black Edison”
- Born in 1856 in Australia or Ohio
- Went to work at young age
- Mainly self-educated / read anything he could find on electricity.
- Worked as fireman and then engineer on railroad.
Telephone invented in 1870s by Bell
Early 1880s, Telephone Transmitter
Woods: “My invention relates to a method of and apparatus for the transmission of articulate speech and other sounds through the medium of electricity.”
A combination telephone and telegraph.
What need does this meet?
1887 induction telegraph
Woods: “for the purpose of averting accidents by keeping each train informed of the whereabouts of the one immediately ahead of following it, in communicating with the stations from moving trains…”
See transduction in this process?
Granville Woods: His story
- Tried to market his inventions himself.
- Sold/Gave up rights to many of his patents to corporations like: American Bell Telephone Company, General Electric and Westinghouse.
- Died 1910 in virtual poverty.
See connections to Winston's model?
Similar story to other communication inventors?
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