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Books with title Women Inventors

  • Women Inventors

    Shaina Indovino

    eBook (Mason Crest, Sept. 2, 2014)
    Women have made major contributions to science throughout history, including by creating new and incredible inventions. Learn about the lives of some of the most amazing women inventors, from Margaret Knight to Rachel Zimmerman, as well as their exciting and important work. Discover what it takes to be an inventor. Find out about the opportunities women inventors have today. Read Women Inventors to see if following in the footsteps of the many brilliant women whose inventions have made their mark is something you want to do.
  • Women Inventors

    Linda Jacobs Altman

    Hardcover (Facts on File, June 1, 1997)
    Offers profiles of Amanda Theodosia Jones, Carrie Everson, Dr. Sara Josephine Baker, Madam C.J. Walker, Ida Rosenthal, Katharine Blodgett, Elizabeth Hazan and Rachel Brown, Bette Graham, and Ruth Handler
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  • Inventors:

    Philip Hubert

    eBook
    Men of Achievement - INVENTORS (AN ILLUSTRATED NOVEL)Imagine getting a glipse into the minds of the GREATEST AMERICAN INVENTORS of history.This beautifully illustrated novel contains the stories of more then 20 of the Greatest American Inventors over the past century.BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, ROBERT FULTON, ELI WHITNEY, ELIAS HOWE, SAMUEL F.B. MORSE, CHARLES GOODYEAR, JOHN ERICSSON, CYRUS HALL MCCORMICK, THOMAS A. EDISON, ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL and more !Get a little piece of history RIGHT ON YOUR KINDLE !!!In the words of Philip G. Hubert:"This book, dealing with our great inventors, their origins, hopes, aims, principles, disappointments, trials, and triumphs, their daily life and personal character, presents just enough concerning their inventions to make the story intelligible. The history is often a painful one. When poor Goodyear, the inventor of vulcanized rubber, was one day asked what he wanted to make of his boys, he is said to have replied: "Make them anything but inventors; mankind has nothing but cuffs and kicks for those who try to do it a service."Meanwhile, the value of the work done by great inventors is widely acknowledged. In a remarkable sketch of the history of civilization, Professor Huxley remarked, in 1887, that the wonderful increase of industrial production by the application of machinery, the improvement of old technical processes and the invention of new ones, constitutes the most salient feature of the world's progress during the last fifty years. If this was true a few years ago, its truth is still more apparent to-day. It is safe to say that within fifty years power, light, and heat will cost half, perhaps one-tenth, of what they do now; and this virtually means that in 1943 mankind will be4 able to buy decent food, shelter, and clothing for half or one-tenth of the labor now required. Steam is said to have reduced the working hours of man in the civilized world from fourteen to ten a day. Electricity will mark the next giant step in advance.With the many and superb tools now at our service, of which our fathers knew comparatively nothing—steam, electricity, the telegraph, telephone, phonograph, and the camera—we and our descendants ought to accomplish even greater wonders than these. As invention thus rises in the scale of importance to humanity, the history of the pioneers and, to the shame of mankind be it said, the martyrs of the art, becomes of intense interest. In the annals of hero-worship the inventor of the perfecting press ought to stand before the great general, and Elias Howe should rank before Napoleon. Whitney, Howe, Morse, and Goodyear, to mention but a few of our Americans, contributed thousands of millions of dollars to the nation's wealth and received comparatively nothing in return. Their history suggests as pertinent the inquiry whether our patent laws do not need a radical change. The burden and cost of proving that an invention deserves no protection ought to fall upon whoever infringes a patent granted by the Government. At present it is all the other way."Enjoy !!
  • Inventors

    Martin W Sandler

    Paperback (HarperCollins, July 1, 2014)
    Martin W. Sandler's Inventors presents the evolution of inventions as they have never been seen before—and celebrates the spirit of the great American inventors who let loose their imaginations and changed the world forever. Americans have been characterized by their inventive spirit since the days of Benjamin Franklin, but the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries proved especially fruitful in groundbreaking discoveries that revolutionized life as we know it. This book includes an author's note, index, and over one hundred vintage photographs, posters, and paintings from the Library of Congress archives. 1997 Notable Children's Trade Book in Social Studies (NCSS/CBC). Supports the Common Core State Standards.
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  • Women Inventors

    Shaina Carmel Indovino, Ann Lee-Karlon

    Library Binding (Mason Crest, Sept. 1, 2013)
    Profiles such famous women inventors as Margaret Knight, Stephanie Kwolek, and Patsy Sherman.
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  • Incredible Women Inventors

    Sandra Braun

    Paperback (Second Story Press, March 1, 2007)
    The latest addition to the acclaimed Woman's Hall of Fame Series profiles ten incredible women with an itch to invent. Written in an accessible, engaging, and informative style, Incredible Women Inventors examines both the challenges and successes in the lives of Canadian and international problem-solvers. From Bette Nesmith Graham, inventor of Liquid Paper, to Elizabeth "Elsie" MacGill, the first woman aircraft designer in the world, young readers will have much to motivate them, both in science and in life.
  • American Women Inventors

    Carole Ann Camp

    Library Binding (Enslow Pub Inc, Feb. 1, 2004)
    Ten biographies of American women inventors, including Madam C.J. Walker, Lillian Gilbreth, Beulah Henry, Elizabeth Lee Hazen, Rachel Fuller Brown, Katherine Blodgett, Gertrude B. Elion, Stephanie Louise Kwolek, Edith Flanigen, and Ellen Ochoa.
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  • Inventors

    Struan Reid

    Paperback (Usborne Pub Ltd, June 1, 1994)
    Briefly introduces major inventions from ancient times to the present, in each field of endeavor from measuring and manufacturing to communications and computers, and explains who invented them and under what circumstances.
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  • Women Inventors 4

    Jean F. Blashfield

    Library Binding (Capstone Pr Inc, Sept. 16, 1995)
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  • Women Inventors 1

    Jean F. Blashfield

    Library Binding (Capstone Pr Inc, Sept. 15, 1995)
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  • Inventors

    Martin W. Sandler

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, March 1, 1996)
    Photographs and illustrations present the evolution of our country's greatest inventions and how they led the way to new industies and discoveries
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  • Women Inventors 3

    Jean F. Blashfield

    Library Binding (Capstone Pr Inc, Sept. 15, 1995)
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