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1900s

Society: ASME Main Category: Mechanical Sub Category: Era: 1900s DateCreated: 1907 Titan Crane Clydebank Rebuilt Clydebank State: Zip: G81 1BF Country: Scotland Website: https://www.asme.org/about-asme/who-we-are/engineering-history/landmarks/253-titan-crane Creator: Hunter, Adam

The largest crane of the hammer-head or Titan' type, and the earliest s

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2013
Image Credit: Courtesy Thomas Nugest (CC BY-SA 2.0) Image Caption: Era_date_from:
Batavia Windmills
Society: ASME Main Category: Sub Category: Era: 1900s DateCreated: 1863 155 Houston St Batavia State: IL Zip: 60510 Country: USA Website: https://www.asme.org/about-asme/who-we-are/engineering-history/landmarks/254-batavia-windmills Creator:
Collection of restored windmill operated waterpumps made at one of the three windmill manufacturing companies in Batavia.
YearAdded:
2013
Image Credit: Courtesy Flickr/Fuzzy Gerdes (CC BY 2.0) Image Caption: Era_date_from:
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In 1900 the United States Weather Bureau hired 34-year-old electrical engineer Reginald Fessenden to develop a wireless system that could distribute forecasts and relay meteorological data. The Canadian-born inventor, a protégé of Thomas Edison, former consultant for Westinghouse, and professor at Purdue and Western universities, moved his family to Spartan accommodations at the Weather Bureau station at Cobb Island, Maryland, 60 miles southeast of Washington, D.C., in the Potomac River.

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While Thomas Edison’s 1879 lightbulb represented an epochal advance, it remained far from perfect: its carbonized cellulose filament gulped power. In 1905 managers at General Electric’s pioneering research laboratory in Schenectady, New York, decided to figure out a way to improve filament performance. They hired 32-year-old William Coolidge, a research assistant to Arthur Noyes at MIT’s Department of Chemistry.

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Herbert Dow in 1888 Photo courtesy of the Post Street Archives.
Society: ACS Main Category: Chemical Sub Category: Industrial Advances Era: 1900s DateCreated: 1891 Herbert H. Dow Historical Museum Midland State: MI Zip: 48640 Country: USA Website: https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/education/whatischemistry/landmarks/bromineproduction.html, https://www.acs.org/content/dam/acsorg/education/whatischemistry/landmarks/bromineproduction/first-electrolytic-production-of-bromine-historical-resource.pdf Creator: Herbert H. Dow

On January 4, 1891, Herbert H. Dow succeeded in producing bromine electrolytically from central Michigan’s rich brine resources. In the years that followed, this and other processes developed by Dow and the company he founded led to an increasing stream of chemicals from brines. The commercial success of these endeavors helped to promote the growth of the American chemical industry.

 

The plaque commemorating the event reads:

YearAdded:
1997
Image Credit: courtesy of the Post Street Archives. Image Caption: Herbert Dow in 1888 Era_date_from:
Subscribe to 1900s
Fall 2010 | Volume 25, Issue 3
In 1900 the United States Weather Bureau hired 34-year-old electrical engineer Reginald Fessenden to develop a wireless system that could distribute forecasts and relay meteorological data. The Canadian-born inventor, a protégé of Thomas Edison, former consultant for Westinghouse, and professor at…
Fall 2010 | Volume 25, Issue 3
While Thomas Edison’s 1879 lightbulb represented an epochal advance, it remained far from perfect: its carbonized cellulose filament gulped power. In 1905 managers at General Electric’s pioneering research laboratory in Schenectady, New York, decided to figure out a way to improve filament…

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