Would blacks be better off without whites?

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Rotagilla, how could you overlook such groundbreaking 'inventions' like the mop (I kid you not), rolling pin (a large dowel) and the legendary key chain?!!!

Jesus wept, man, are you a racist, or something?
 
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[MENTION=50008]BriannaMichele[/MENTION]

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

Elevator
Alexander Miles in 1887? Nope.
Was Miles the first to patent a self-closing shaft door? Nope.

Steam-powered hoisting devices were used in England by 1800. Elisha Graves Otis' 1853 "safety elevator" prevented the car from falling if the cable broke, and thus paved the way for the first commercial passenger elevator, installed in New York City's Haughwout Department Store in 1857. The first electric elevator appeared in Mannheim, Germany in 1880, built by the German firm of Siemens and Halske. A self-closing shaft door was invented by J.W. Meaker in 1874 ("Improvement in Self-closing Hatchways," US Patent No. 147,853).




fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878
Joseph Winters in 1878? Nope.

Winters' "fire escape" was a wagon-mounted ladder. The first such contraption patented in the US was the work of William P. Withey, 1840 (US patent #1599). The fire escape with a "lazy-tongs" type ladder, more similar to Winters' patent, was pioneered by Hüttman and Kornelio in 1849 (US patent #6155). One of the first fire escapes of any type was invented in 18th-century England:

In 1784, Daniel Maseres, of England, invented a machine called a fire escape, which, being fastened to the window, would enable anyone to descend to the street without injury.

Benjamin Butterworth, Growth of Industrial Art, 1888

By 1888 the US had granted 1,099 patents on fire escapes of "many forms, and of every possible material"



fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872
Thomas J. Martin in 1872? Nope.

In 1813, British army captain George Manby created the first known portable fire extinguisher: a two-foot-tall copper cylinder that held 3 gallons of water and used compressed air as a propellant. One of the earliest extinguishers to use a chemical extinguishing agent, and not just water, was invented in 1849 by the Englishman William Henry Phillips, who patented his "fire annihilator" in England and the United States (US patent #7,269).



fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890
W.B. Purvis in 1890? Nope.

The first reference to what seems to be a fountain pen appears in an Arabic text from 969 AD; details of the instrument are not known. A French "Bion" pen, dated 1702, represents the oldest fountain pen that still survives. Later models included John Scheffer's 1819 pen, possibly the first to be mass-produced; John Jacob Parker's "self-filling" pen of 1832; and the famous Lewis Waterman pen of 1884 (US Patents #293545, #307735).


gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914

Garrett Morgan in 1914? Nope.

The invention of the gas mask predates Morgan's breathing device by several decades. Early versions were constructed by the Scottish chemist John Stenhouse in 1854 and the physicist John Tyndall in the 1870s, among many other inventors prior to World War I.


golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899
Dr. George Grant in 1899? Nope.

A small rubber platform invented by Scotsmen William Bloxsom and Arthur Douglas was the world's first patented golf tee (British patent #12941 of 1889). The first known tee to penetrate the ground, in contrast to earlier tees that sat on the surface, was the peg-like "Perfectum" patented in 1892 by Percy Ellis of England. American dentist William Lowell introduced the most common form of tee used today, the simple wooden peg with a flared top.


guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886
Child, please!

The guitar was invented, in its earliest stage, in 1779 by a Neapolitan named Gaetano Vinaccia. It was a derivative of the mandolin.


hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–

Lyda Newman in 1898? Nope.

An early US patent for a recognizably modern hairbrush went to Hugh Rock in 1854 (US Design Patent no. D645), though surely there were hairbrushes long before there was a US Patent Office.

The claim that Lyda Newman's brush was the first with "synthetic bristles" is false: her patent mentions nothing about synthetic bristles and is concerned only with a new way of making the handle detachable from the head. Besides, a hairbrush that included "elastic wire teeth" in combination with natural bristles had already been patented by Samuel Firey in 1870 (US, #106680). Nylon bristles weren't even possible until the invention of nylon in 1935.


hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883
William Purvis in 1883? Nope.

The earliest known postal handstamp was brought into use by Henry Bishop, Postmaster General of Great Britain, in the year 1661. The stamp imprinted the mail with a bisected circle containing the month and the date. THese were commonly referred to as "Bishop marks"


horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885
Child, please!
The horseshoe was invented by the Romans. The poet Catullus mentioned mule that lost its horseshoe in a song from the first century BC.


ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887

Sarah Boone in 1892? Nope.

Of the several hundred US patents on ironing boards granted prior to Sarah Boone's, the first three went to William Vandenburg in 1858 (patents #19390, #19883, #20231). The first American female patentee of an ironing board is probably Sarah Mort of Dayton, Ohio, who received patent #57170 in 1866. In 1869, Henry Soggs of Columbus, Pennsylvania earned US patent #90966 for an ironing board resembling the modern type, with folding legs, adjustable height, and a cover. Another nice example of a modern-looking board was designed by J.H. Mallory in 1871, patent #120296.





lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889

Burr in 1899? Nope.

English engineer Edwin Budding invented the first reel-type lawn mower (with blades arranged in a cylindrical pattern) and had it patented in England in 1830. In 1868 the United States issued patent #73807 to Amariah M. Hills of Connecticut, who went on to establish the Archimedean Lawn Mower Co. in 1871. By 1888, the US Patent Office had granted 138 patents for lawn mowers (Butterworth, Growth of Industrial Art). Doubtlessly there were even more by the time Burr got his patent in 1899.

Some website authors want Burr to have invented the first "rotary blade" mower, with a centrally mounted spinning blade. But his patent #624749 shows yet another twist on the old reel mower, differing in only a few details with Budding's original.


lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897

J. H. Smith in 1897? Elijah McCoy? Nope.

The first US patent with the title "lawn sprinkler" was issued to J. Lessler of Buffalo, New York in 1871 (#121949). Early examples of water-propelled, rotating lawn sprinklers were patented by J. Oswald in 1890 (#425340) and J. S. Woolsey in 1891 (#457099) among a gazillion others.

Smith's patent shows just another rotating sprinkler, and McCoy's 1899 patent was for a turtle-shaped sprinkler.


lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–
Too stupid to consider. Locks have been around since before christ.

lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895

LMAO..you don't even know what a "lubricating cup is, do you?
Just keep regurgitating the afro centrist, revisionist crap you're fed. Girl, do some research before you post stupid shit like this...geez...

Automatic Lubricator, "Real McCoy"
Elijah McCoy revolutionized industry in 1872 by inventing the first device to automatically oil machinery? Nope. The phrase "Real McCoy" arose to distinguish Elijah's inventions from cheap imitations? Nope.

The oil cup, which automatically delivers a steady trickle of lubricant to machine parts while the machine is running, predates McCoy's career; a description of one appears in the May 6, 1848 issue of Scientific American. The automatic "displacement lubricator" for steam engines was developed in 1860 by John Ramsbottom of England, and notably improved in 1862 by James Roscoe of the same country. The "hydrostatic" lubricator originated no later than 1871.

Variants of the phrase Real McCoy appear in Scottish literature dating back to at least 1856 — well before Elijah McCoy could have been involved.



mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891
Mailbox (letter drop box)
P. Downing invented the street letter drop box in 1891? Nope.
George Becket invented the private mailbox in 1892? Nope.

The US Postal Service says that "Street boxes for mail collection began to appear in large [US] cities by 1858." They appeared in Europe even earlier, according to historian Laurin Zilliacus:

Mail boxes as we understand them first appeared on the streets of Belgian towns in 1848. In Paris they came two years later, while the English received their 'pillar boxes' in 1855.

Laurin Zilliacus, Mail for the World, p. 178 (New York, J. Day Co., 1953)

From the same book (p.178), "Private mail boxes were invented in the United States in about 1860."

Eventually, letter drop boxes came equipped with inner lids to prevent miscreants from rummaging through the mail pile. The first of many US patents for such a purpose was granted in 1860 to John North of Middletown, Connecticut (US Pat. #27466).


mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893

Thomas W. Stewart in 1893? Nope.

Mops go back a long, long way before 1893. Just how long, is hard to determine. Restricting our view to the modern era, we find that the United States issued its first mop patent (#241) in 1837 to Jacob Howe, called "Construction of Mop-Heads and the Mode of Securing them upon Handles." One of the first patented mops with a built-in wringer was the one H. & J. Morton invented in 1859 (US #24049).

The mop specified in Stewart's patent #499402 has a lever-operated clamp for "holding the mop rags"; the lever is not a wringing mechanism as erroneously reported on certain websites. Other inventors had already patented mops with lever-operated clamps, one of the first being Greenleaf Stackpole in 1869 (US Pat. #89803).


motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939
Motor? What kind of "motor"..."motors"..electrical and automotive existed LONG before 1939...Believe that. Did you even READ any of this crap before you posted it? Do you know ANYTHING about history?
christ...how stupid.


peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896
PEANUT BUTTER? LMMFAO..PEANUT BUTTER?...Are you naive or ignorant? peanut butter....

George Washington Carver (who began his peanut research in 1903)? Nope.

Peanuts, which are native to the New World tropics, were mashed into paste by Aztecs hundreds of years ago. Evidence of modern peanut butter comes from US patent #306727 issued to Marcellus Gilmore Edson of Montreal, Quebec in 1884, for a process of milling roasted peanuts between heated surfaces until the peanuts reached "a fluid or semi-fluid state." As the product cooled, it set into what Edson described as "a consistency like that of butter, lard, or ointment." In 1890, George A. Bayle Jr., owner of a food business in St. Louis, manufactured peanut butter and sold it out of barrels. J.H. Kellogg, of cereal fame, secured US patent #580787 in 1897 for his "Process of Preparing Nutmeal," which produced a "pasty adhesive substance" that Kellogg called "nut-butter."


pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897

John Lee Love in 1897? Nope.

Bernard Lassimone of Limoges, France invented one of the earliest sharpeners, receiving French patent number 2444 in 1828. An apparent ancestor of the 20th-century hand-cranked sharpener was patented by G. F. Ballou in 1896 (US #556709) and marketed by the A.B. Dick Company as the "Planetary Pencil Pointer." As the user held the pencil stationary and turned the crank, twin milling cutters revolved around the tip of the pencil and shaved it into a point.

Love's patent #594114 shows a variation on a different kind of sharpener, in which one would crank the pencil itself around in a stirring motion. An earlier device of a similar type was devised in 1888 by G.H. Courson (patent #388533), and sold under the name "President Pencil Sharpener."


refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891

I've already been over this lie and debunked it.

One more time, though;
Refrigerator
Thomas Elkins in 1879? John Stanard in 1891? Nope.

Oliver Evans proposed a mechanical refrigerator based on a vapor-compression cycle in 1805 and Jacob Perkins had a working machine built in 1834. Dr. John Gorrie created an air-cycle refrigeration system in about 1844, which he installed in a Florida hospital. In the 1850s Alexander Twining in the USA and James Harrison in Australia used mechanical refrigeration to produce ice on a commercial scale. Around the same time, the Carré brothers of France led the development of absorption refrigeration systems.

Stanard's patent describes not a refrigeration machine, but an old-fashioned icebox — an insulated cabinet into which ice is placed to cool the interior. As such, it was a "refrigerator" only in the old sense of the term, which included non-mechanical coolers. Elkins created a similarly low-tech cooler, acknowledging in his patent #221222 that "I am aware that chilling substances inclosed within a porous box or jar by wetting its outer surface is an old and well-known process."


riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895

child. I'm beginning to feel sorry for you, now. You realize that saddles have been around since man domesticated the horse...LONG before 1895.


street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890
Charles Brooks in 1896? Nope.

Brooks' patent was for a modified version of a common type of street sweeper cart that had long been known, with a rotary brush that swept refuse onto an elevator belt and into a trash bin. In the United States, street sweepers started being patented in the 1840s, and by 1900 the Patent Office had issued about 300 patents for such machines.


phone transmitter: Granville T.
Woods; December 2, 1884
You don't even know what a "phone transmitter is, do you? LMAO..
most afro centrist websites claim he invented the railway telegraph...I'll debunk that lie, though.
Railway Telegraph
Granville Woods prevented railway accidents and saved countless lives by inventing the train telegraph (patented in 1887), which allowed communication to and from moving trains? No. absolutely not.

The earliest patents for train telegraphs go back to at least 1873. Lucius Phelps was the first inventor in the field to attract widespread notice, and the telegrams he exchanged on the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad in January 1885 were hailed in the Feb. 21, 1885 issue of Scientific American as "perhaps the first ever sent to and from a moving train." Phelps remained at the forefront in developing the technology and by the end of 1887 already held 14 US patents on his system. He joined a team led by Thomas Edison, who had been working on his "grasshopper telegraph" for trains, and together they constructed on the Lehigh Valley Railroad one of the only induction telegraph systems ever put to commercial use. Although this telegraph was a technical success, it fulfilled no public need, and the market for on-board train telegraphy never took off. There is no evidence that any commercial railway telegraph based on Granville Woods's patents was ever built.




traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923
Invented by Garrett A. Morgan in 1923? Nope.

The first known traffic signal appeared in London in 1868 near the Houses of Parliament. Designed by JP Knight, it featured two semaphore arms and two gas lamps. The earliest electric traffic lights include Lester Wire's two-color version set up in Salt Lake City circa 1912, James Hoge's system (US patent #1,251,666) installed in Cleveland by the American Traffic Signal Company in 1914, and William Potts' 4-way red-yellow-green lights introduced in Detroit beginning in 1920. New York City traffic towers began flashing three-color signals also in 1920.

Garrett Morgan's cross-shaped, crank-operated semaphore was not among the first half-hundred patented traffic signals, nor was it "automatic" as is sometimes claimed, nor did it play any part in the evolution of the modern traffic light.


typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885

Typewriter
L.S. Burridge & N.R. Marshman in 1885? Nope.

Henry Mill, an English engineer, was the first person to patent the basic idea of the typewriter in 1714. The first working typewriter known to have actually been built was the work of Pellegrino Turri of Italy in 1808. The familiar QWERTY keyboard, developed by C. L. Sholes and C. Glidden, reached the market in 1874. In 1878 change-case keys were added that enabled the typing of both capital and small letters.



You should really read some history from reliable sources..look up the patent numbers I posted if you don't believe me..
Mindlessly repeating revisionist afro centric lies pushed by anti whites doesn't make you look very smart.
Negroes NEED something to "feel good" about and since their history doesn't offer many opportunities they try to steal credit for things they DIDN'T do/invent.
Don't buy into the lies. Educate yourself.
 
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if black people are so oppressed by whitey why don't they move to Africa where there are few whites to be mean to them?

They can build their own paradise free of the white devil's interference
 
Just curious, have blacks ever invented anything of note? :dunno:
 
With Blacks free of the white devil they will accomplish great things. Take the Congo and Somalia for instance. Or maybe Rwanda....Mali....Uganda? The list is endless.....right? :eusa_whistle:
 
I've often wondered what particular pathology causes white racists to feel terror and savagery when faced with the simple truth. White people simple are not needed. I would miss some of them but need them? I cant think of one thing I would need them for.



Without white folks, you'd have no computer, no internet, no fridge, no tv, no radio, no electricity, no lights, no car, no bus, no plane... And especially no baking soda to make crack with.:D


The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839

auto fishing devise: G. Cook; May 30, 1899

automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932

baby buggy: W.H. Richardson; June 18, 1899

bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899

biscuit cutter: A.P. Ashbourne; November 30, 1875

blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945

cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971

chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897

clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862

curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889

curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896

door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897

egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

eye protector: P. Johnson; November 2, 1880

fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878

fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872

folding bed: L. C. Bailey; July 18, 1899

folding chair: Brody & Surgwar; June 11, 1889

fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890

furniture caster: O. A. Fisher; 1878

gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914

golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899

guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886

hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–

hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883

horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885

ice cream scooper: A. L. Cralle; February 2, 1897

improv. sugar making: Norbet Rillieux; December 10, 1846

insect-destroyer gun: A. C. Richard; February 28, 1899

ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887

key chain: F. J. Loudin; January 9, 1894

lantern: Michael C. Harvey; August 19, 1884

lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889

lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897

lemon squeezer: J. Thomas White; December 8, 1893

lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–

lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895

lunch pail: James Robinson; 1887

mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891

mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893

motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939

peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896

pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897

record player arm: Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819

refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891

riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895

rolling pin: John W. Reed; 1864

shampoo headrest: C. O. Bailiff; October 11, 1898

spark plug: Edmond Berger; February 2, 1839

stethoscope: Imhotep; Ancient Egypt

stove: T. A. Carrington; July 25, 1876

straightening comb: Madam C. J. Walker; Approx 1905

street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890

phone transmitter: Granville T.
Woods; December 2, 1884

thermostat control: Frederick M. Jones; February 23, 1960

traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923

tricycle: M. A. Cherry; May 6, 1886

typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885


Black History: Things Invented By African-Americans | THE MILWAUKEE DRUM



•Pinky•









I can point out one error to you that is certain, the traffic light was invented by J.P. Knight and was installed at the corner of George and Bridge streets near the House of Commons in 1868. There are others that I question on your list as well, but this is a well known fact to car enthusiasts.


J.P. Knight and the First Traffic Light - Invent.Answers.com
 
Without white folks, you'd have no computer, no internet, no fridge, no tv, no radio, no electricity, no lights, no car, no bus, no plane... And especially no baking soda to make crack with.:D


The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839

auto fishing devise: G. Cook; May 30, 1899

automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932

baby buggy: W.H. Richardson; June 18, 1899

bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899

biscuit cutter: A.P. Ashbourne; November 30, 1875

blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945

cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971

chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897

clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862

curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889

curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896

door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897

egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

eye protector: P. Johnson; November 2, 1880

fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878

fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872

folding bed: L. C. Bailey; July 18, 1899

folding chair: Brody & Surgwar; June 11, 1889

fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890

furniture caster: O. A. Fisher; 1878

gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914

golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899

guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886

hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–

hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883

horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885

ice cream scooper: A. L. Cralle; February 2, 1897

improv. sugar making: Norbet Rillieux; December 10, 1846

insect-destroyer gun: A. C. Richard; February 28, 1899

ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887

key chain: F. J. Loudin; January 9, 1894

lantern: Michael C. Harvey; August 19, 1884

lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889

lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897

lemon squeezer: J. Thomas White; December 8, 1893

lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–

lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895

lunch pail: James Robinson; 1887

mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891

mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893

motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939

peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896

pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897

record player arm: Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819

refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891

riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895

rolling pin: John W. Reed; 1864

shampoo headrest: C. O. Bailiff; October 11, 1898

spark plug: Edmond Berger; February 2, 1839

stethoscope: Imhotep; Ancient Egypt

stove: T. A. Carrington; July 25, 1876

straightening comb: Madam C. J. Walker; Approx 1905

street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890

phone transmitter: Granville T.
Woods; December 2, 1884

thermostat control: Frederick M. Jones; February 23, 1960

traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923

tricycle: M. A. Cherry; May 6, 1886

typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885


Black History: Things Invented By African-Americans | THE MILWAUKEE DRUM



•Pinky•









I can point out one error to you that is certain, the traffic light was invented by J.P. Knight and was installed at the corner of George and Bridge streets near the House of Commons in 1868. There are others that I question on your list as well, but this is a well known fact to car enthusiasts.


J.P. Knight and the First Traffic Light - Invent.Answers.com

I shredded the whole list in posts #412 and #414 in this thread.

EDIT:
The post numbers exposing negro lies about inventors are now #400 and #402 due to moderators deleting trash from agitators.
Just for clarity.
 
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The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839

auto fishing devise: G. Cook; May 30, 1899

automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932

baby buggy: W.H. Richardson; June 18, 1899

bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899

biscuit cutter: A.P. Ashbourne; November 30, 1875

blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945

cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971

chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897

clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862

curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889

curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896

door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897

egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

eye protector: P. Johnson; November 2, 1880

fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878

fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872

folding bed: L. C. Bailey; July 18, 1899

folding chair: Brody & Surgwar; June 11, 1889

fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890

furniture caster: O. A. Fisher; 1878

gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914

golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899

guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886

hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–

hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883

horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885

ice cream scooper: A. L. Cralle; February 2, 1897

improv. sugar making: Norbet Rillieux; December 10, 1846

insect-destroyer gun: A. C. Richard; February 28, 1899

ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887

key chain: F. J. Loudin; January 9, 1894

lantern: Michael C. Harvey; August 19, 1884

lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889

lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897

lemon squeezer: J. Thomas White; December 8, 1893

lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–

lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895

lunch pail: James Robinson; 1887

mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891

mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893

motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939

peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896

pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897

record player arm: Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819

refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891

riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895

rolling pin: John W. Reed; 1864

shampoo headrest: C. O. Bailiff; October 11, 1898

spark plug: Edmond Berger; February 2, 1839

stethoscope: Imhotep; Ancient Egypt

stove: T. A. Carrington; July 25, 1876

straightening comb: Madam C. J. Walker; Approx 1905

street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890

phone transmitter: Granville T.
Woods; December 2, 1884

thermostat control: Frederick M. Jones; February 23, 1960

traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923

tricycle: M. A. Cherry; May 6, 1886

typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885


Black History: Things Invented By African-Americans | THE MILWAUKEE DRUM



•Pinky•









I can point out one error to you that is certain, the traffic light was invented by J.P. Knight and was installed at the corner of George and Bridge streets near the House of Commons in 1868. There are others that I question on your list as well, but this is a well known fact to car enthusiasts.


J.P. Knight and the First Traffic Light - Invent.Answers.com

I shredded the whole list in posts #412 and #414 in this thread.





Yes, I see that now. I have been cleaning this thread which leads me to this... (Puts on Mod hat)

Keep it civil and addressing the OP boys and girls! Other than some silly flaming there has been some interesting discussion. Let's keep it that way.





Clearly some of you are having a problem doing this. And yes, ALL bigots are allowed to demonstrate their silliness.
 
Elevator
Alexander Miles created an automatic mechanism that closed access to the shaft

http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/bl_Alexander_Miles.htm

Garret Morgan
Gasmask

http://science.howstuffworks.com/in...0-inventions-by-african-americans.htm#page=10

T Marshall did have a patent on what he named the "fire extinguisher" not the portable one we use to day but a mechanism that quickly releases pressurized water.

William Purvis

"William Purvis of Philadelphia invented and patented improvements to the fountain pen in 1890. William Purvis made several improvements to the fountain pen in order to make a "more durable, inexpensive, and better pen to carry in the pocket." Purvis used an elastic tube between the pen nib and the ink reservoir that used a suction action to return any excess ink to the ink reservoir, reducing ink spills and increasing the longevity of the ink. Fountain pens were first patented as early as 1809."

http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blwilliampurvis.htm

Golf T
T Grant had a patents on improvements for the golf
http://www.google.com/patents/US638920

Harp guitar
Robert Flemings had a patent of improved model harp guitar
https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA

Lyda Newman
Created a hairbrush for African Americans that could be easily be taken apart to be cleaned and then reconstructed
https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA

Handstamp William purvis
Created and improved model of self inking handstamp that could be uses for postal service and could stamp dates simultaneously.
https://www.google.com/patents/US27...a=X&ei=e1vRU8muKYOQyATPooCgCw&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA

J ricks had two separate patents on his improved horseshoes designed not only to protect the bottom of the hoof but wrap around the top for stability
https://www.google.com/patents/US62...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA

https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAQ

Sarah Boone - ironing board
"Boone's ironing board was designed to improve the quality of ironing sleeves and the bodies of women's garments. The board was very narrow, curved, and made of wood. The shape and structure allowed it to fit a sleeve and it was reversible, so one could iron both sides of the sleeve.[1]"

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Boone

Albert burr - rotary lawn mower

"Albert Burr patented an improved rotary blade lawn mower. Burr designed a lawn mower with traction wheels and a rotary blade that was designed to not easily get plugged up from lawn clippings. John Albert Burr also improved the design of lawn mowers by making it possible to mow closer to building and wall edges."

http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/bl_John_Albert_Burr.htm


J smiths - sprinkler DEBATABLE!!

there's still controversy over who created the first sprinkler. But j smith did create the first rotating sprinkler with 2 water exits that could be attached to a common water hose for either residential and agricultural use.

https://www.google.com/patents/US71...a=X&ei=zGDRU5HTFsSLyATcp4H4Cg&ved=0CBwQ6wEwAA

W A Martin- created the MODERN lock and update and improved version of the lock originally created by the Chinese with components from the Egyptians. First lock improvement in 4000 years.

https://www.google.com/patents/US40...a=X&ei=cGPRU4rRHoiayATH8oDgAg&ved=0CCoQ6wEwAg

Don't even get me started on Fredrick Jones you asshole! The man had 60 different patents including the FIRST practical refrigerating system for trucks and trains. Not to mention the 20 or more automotive patents he had that would forever change the automotive industry.


http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_McKinley_Jones


I'd keep going but doing my hair is more important than arguing with a racist prick

















•Pinky•
 
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[MENTION=50008]BriannaMichele[/MENTION]

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

Elevator
Alexander Miles in 1887? Nope.
Was Miles the first to patent a self-closing shaft door? Nope.

Steam-powered hoisting devices were used in England by 1800. Elisha Graves Otis' 1853 "safety elevator" prevented the car from falling if the cable broke, and thus paved the way for the first commercial passenger elevator, installed in New York City's Haughwout Department Store in 1857. The first electric elevator appeared in Mannheim, Germany in 1880, built by the German firm of Siemens and Halske. A self-closing shaft door was invented by J.W. Meaker in 1874 ("Improvement in Self-closing Hatchways," US Patent No. 147,853).





Joseph Winters in 1878? Nope.

Winters' "fire escape" was a wagon-mounted ladder. The first such contraption patented in the US was the work of William P. Withey, 1840 (US patent #1599). The fire escape with a "lazy-tongs" type ladder, more similar to Winters' patent, was pioneered by Hüttman and Kornelio in 1849 (US patent #6155). One of the first fire escapes of any type was invented in 18th-century England:

In 1784, Daniel Maseres, of England, invented a machine called a fire escape, which, being fastened to the window, would enable anyone to descend to the street without injury.

Benjamin Butterworth, Growth of Industrial Art, 1888

By 1888 the US had granted 1,099 patents on fire escapes of "many forms, and of every possible material"




Thomas J. Martin in 1872? Nope.

In 1813, British army captain George Manby created the first known portable fire extinguisher: a two-foot-tall copper cylinder that held 3 gallons of water and used compressed air as a propellant. One of the earliest extinguishers to use a chemical extinguishing agent, and not just water, was invented in 1849 by the Englishman William Henry Phillips, who patented his "fire annihilator" in England and the United States (US patent #7,269).




W.B. Purvis in 1890? Nope.

The first reference to what seems to be a fountain pen appears in an Arabic text from 969 AD; details of the instrument are not known. A French "Bion" pen, dated 1702, represents the oldest fountain pen that still survives. Later models included John Scheffer's 1819 pen, possibly the first to be mass-produced; John Jacob Parker's "self-filling" pen of 1832; and the famous Lewis Waterman pen of 1884 (US Patents #293545, #307735).




Garrett Morgan in 1914? Nope.

The invention of the gas mask predates Morgan's breathing device by several decades. Early versions were constructed by the Scottish chemist John Stenhouse in 1854 and the physicist John Tyndall in the 1870s, among many other inventors prior to World War I.



Dr. George Grant in 1899? Nope.

A small rubber platform invented by Scotsmen William Bloxsom and Arthur Douglas was the world's first patented golf tee (British patent #12941 of 1889). The first known tee to penetrate the ground, in contrast to earlier tees that sat on the surface, was the peg-like "Perfectum" patented in 1892 by Percy Ellis of England. American dentist William Lowell introduced the most common form of tee used today, the simple wooden peg with a flared top.



Child, please!

The guitar was invented, in its earliest stage, in 1779 by a Neapolitan named Gaetano Vinaccia. It was a derivative of the mandolin.




Lyda Newman in 1898? Nope.

An early US patent for a recognizably modern hairbrush went to Hugh Rock in 1854 (US Design Patent no. D645), though surely there were hairbrushes long before there was a US Patent Office.

The claim that Lyda Newman's brush was the first with "synthetic bristles" is false: her patent mentions nothing about synthetic bristles and is concerned only with a new way of making the handle detachable from the head. Besides, a hairbrush that included "elastic wire teeth" in combination with natural bristles had already been patented by Samuel Firey in 1870 (US, #106680). Nylon bristles weren't even possible until the invention of nylon in 1935.



William Purvis in 1883? Nope.

The earliest known postal handstamp was brought into use by Henry Bishop, Postmaster General of Great Britain, in the year 1661. The stamp imprinted the mail with a bisected circle containing the month and the date. THese were commonly referred to as "Bishop marks"



Child, please!
The horseshoe was invented by the Romans. The poet Catullus mentioned mule that lost its horseshoe in a song from the first century BC.




Sarah Boone in 1892? Nope.

Of the several hundred US patents on ironing boards granted prior to Sarah Boone's, the first three went to William Vandenburg in 1858 (patents #19390, #19883, #20231). The first American female patentee of an ironing board is probably Sarah Mort of Dayton, Ohio, who received patent #57170 in 1866. In 1869, Henry Soggs of Columbus, Pennsylvania earned US patent #90966 for an ironing board resembling the modern type, with folding legs, adjustable height, and a cover. Another nice example of a modern-looking board was designed by J.H. Mallory in 1871, patent #120296.







Burr in 1899? Nope.

English engineer Edwin Budding invented the first reel-type lawn mower (with blades arranged in a cylindrical pattern) and had it patented in England in 1830. In 1868 the United States issued patent #73807 to Amariah M. Hills of Connecticut, who went on to establish the Archimedean Lawn Mower Co. in 1871. By 1888, the US Patent Office had granted 138 patents for lawn mowers (Butterworth, Growth of Industrial Art). Doubtlessly there were even more by the time Burr got his patent in 1899.

Some website authors want Burr to have invented the first "rotary blade" mower, with a centrally mounted spinning blade. But his patent #624749 shows yet another twist on the old reel mower, differing in only a few details with Budding's original.




J. H. Smith in 1897? Elijah McCoy? Nope.

The first US patent with the title "lawn sprinkler" was issued to J. Lessler of Buffalo, New York in 1871 (#121949). Early examples of water-propelled, rotating lawn sprinklers were patented by J. Oswald in 1890 (#425340) and J. S. Woolsey in 1891 (#457099) among a gazillion others.

Smith's patent shows just another rotating sprinkler, and McCoy's 1899 patent was for a turtle-shaped sprinkler.



Too stupid to consider. Locks have been around since before christ.



LMAO..you don't even know what a "lubricating cup is, do you?
Just keep regurgitating the afro centrist, revisionist crap you're fed. Girl, do some research before you post stupid shit like this...geez...

Automatic Lubricator, "Real McCoy"
Elijah McCoy revolutionized industry in 1872 by inventing the first device to automatically oil machinery? Nope. The phrase "Real McCoy" arose to distinguish Elijah's inventions from cheap imitations? Nope.

The oil cup, which automatically delivers a steady trickle of lubricant to machine parts while the machine is running, predates McCoy's career; a description of one appears in the May 6, 1848 issue of Scientific American. The automatic "displacement lubricator" for steam engines was developed in 1860 by John Ramsbottom of England, and notably improved in 1862 by James Roscoe of the same country. The "hydrostatic" lubricator originated no later than 1871.

Variants of the phrase Real McCoy appear in Scottish literature dating back to at least 1856 — well before Elijah McCoy could have been involved.




Mailbox (letter drop box)
P. Downing invented the street letter drop box in 1891? Nope.
George Becket invented the private mailbox in 1892? Nope.

The US Postal Service says that "Street boxes for mail collection began to appear in large [US] cities by 1858." They appeared in Europe even earlier, according to historian Laurin Zilliacus:

Mail boxes as we understand them first appeared on the streets of Belgian towns in 1848. In Paris they came two years later, while the English received their 'pillar boxes' in 1855.

Laurin Zilliacus, Mail for the World, p. 178 (New York, J. Day Co., 1953)

From the same book (p.178), "Private mail boxes were invented in the United States in about 1860."

Eventually, letter drop boxes came equipped with inner lids to prevent miscreants from rummaging through the mail pile. The first of many US patents for such a purpose was granted in 1860 to John North of Middletown, Connecticut (US Pat. #27466).




Thomas W. Stewart in 1893? Nope.

Mops go back a long, long way before 1893. Just how long, is hard to determine. Restricting our view to the modern era, we find that the United States issued its first mop patent (#241) in 1837 to Jacob Howe, called "Construction of Mop-Heads and the Mode of Securing them upon Handles." One of the first patented mops with a built-in wringer was the one H. & J. Morton invented in 1859 (US #24049).

The mop specified in Stewart's patent #499402 has a lever-operated clamp for "holding the mop rags"; the lever is not a wringing mechanism as erroneously reported on certain websites. Other inventors had already patented mops with lever-operated clamps, one of the first being Greenleaf Stackpole in 1869 (US Pat. #89803).



Motor? What kind of "motor"..."motors"..electrical and automotive existed LONG before 1939...Believe that. Did you even READ any of this crap before you posted it? Do you know ANYTHING about history?
christ...how stupid.



PEANUT BUTTER? LMMFAO..PEANUT BUTTER?...Are you naive or ignorant? peanut butter....

George Washington Carver (who began his peanut research in 1903)? Nope.

Peanuts, which are native to the New World tropics, were mashed into paste by Aztecs hundreds of years ago. Evidence of modern peanut butter comes from US patent #306727 issued to Marcellus Gilmore Edson of Montreal, Quebec in 1884, for a process of milling roasted peanuts between heated surfaces until the peanuts reached "a fluid or semi-fluid state." As the product cooled, it set into what Edson described as "a consistency like that of butter, lard, or ointment." In 1890, George A. Bayle Jr., owner of a food business in St. Louis, manufactured peanut butter and sold it out of barrels. J.H. Kellogg, of cereal fame, secured US patent #580787 in 1897 for his "Process of Preparing Nutmeal," which produced a "pasty adhesive substance" that Kellogg called "nut-butter."




John Lee Love in 1897? Nope.

Bernard Lassimone of Limoges, France invented one of the earliest sharpeners, receiving French patent number 2444 in 1828. An apparent ancestor of the 20th-century hand-cranked sharpener was patented by G. F. Ballou in 1896 (US #556709) and marketed by the A.B. Dick Company as the "Planetary Pencil Pointer." As the user held the pencil stationary and turned the crank, twin milling cutters revolved around the tip of the pencil and shaved it into a point.

Love's patent #594114 shows a variation on a different kind of sharpener, in which one would crank the pencil itself around in a stirring motion. An earlier device of a similar type was devised in 1888 by G.H. Courson (patent #388533), and sold under the name "President Pencil Sharpener."




I've already been over this lie and debunked it.

One more time, though;
Refrigerator
Thomas Elkins in 1879? John Stanard in 1891? Nope.

Oliver Evans proposed a mechanical refrigerator based on a vapor-compression cycle in 1805 and Jacob Perkins had a working machine built in 1834. Dr. John Gorrie created an air-cycle refrigeration system in about 1844, which he installed in a Florida hospital. In the 1850s Alexander Twining in the USA and James Harrison in Australia used mechanical refrigeration to produce ice on a commercial scale. Around the same time, the Carré brothers of France led the development of absorption refrigeration systems.

Stanard's patent describes not a refrigeration machine, but an old-fashioned icebox — an insulated cabinet into which ice is placed to cool the interior. As such, it was a "refrigerator" only in the old sense of the term, which included non-mechanical coolers. Elkins created a similarly low-tech cooler, acknowledging in his patent #221222 that "I am aware that chilling substances inclosed within a porous box or jar by wetting its outer surface is an old and well-known process."




child. I'm beginning to feel sorry for you, now. You realize that saddles have been around since man domesticated the horse...LONG before 1895.



Charles Brooks in 1896? Nope.

Brooks' patent was for a modified version of a common type of street sweeper cart that had long been known, with a rotary brush that swept refuse onto an elevator belt and into a trash bin. In the United States, street sweepers started being patented in the 1840s, and by 1900 the Patent Office had issued about 300 patents for such machines.



You don't even know what a "phone transmitter is, do you? LMAO..
most afro centrist websites claim he invented the railway telegraph...I'll debunk that lie, though.
Railway Telegraph
Granville Woods prevented railway accidents and saved countless lives by inventing the train telegraph (patented in 1887), which allowed communication to and from moving trains? No. absolutely not.

The earliest patents for train telegraphs go back to at least 1873. Lucius Phelps was the first inventor in the field to attract widespread notice, and the telegrams he exchanged on the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad in January 1885 were hailed in the Feb. 21, 1885 issue of Scientific American as "perhaps the first ever sent to and from a moving train." Phelps remained at the forefront in developing the technology and by the end of 1887 already held 14 US patents on his system. He joined a team led by Thomas Edison, who had been working on his "grasshopper telegraph" for trains, and together they constructed on the Lehigh Valley Railroad one of the only induction telegraph systems ever put to commercial use. Although this telegraph was a technical success, it fulfilled no public need, and the market for on-board train telegraphy never took off. There is no evidence that any commercial railway telegraph based on Granville Woods's patents was ever built.





Invented by Garrett A. Morgan in 1923? Nope.

The first known traffic signal appeared in London in 1868 near the Houses of Parliament. Designed by JP Knight, it featured two semaphore arms and two gas lamps. The earliest electric traffic lights include Lester Wire's two-color version set up in Salt Lake City circa 1912, James Hoge's system (US patent #1,251,666) installed in Cleveland by the American Traffic Signal Company in 1914, and William Potts' 4-way red-yellow-green lights introduced in Detroit beginning in 1920. New York City traffic towers began flashing three-color signals also in 1920.

Garrett Morgan's cross-shaped, crank-operated semaphore was not among the first half-hundred patented traffic signals, nor was it "automatic" as is sometimes claimed, nor did it play any part in the evolution of the modern traffic light.


typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885

Typewriter
L.S. Burridge & N.R. Marshman in 1885? Nope.

Henry Mill, an English engineer, was the first person to patent the basic idea of the typewriter in 1714. The first working typewriter known to have actually been built was the work of Pellegrino Turri of Italy in 1808. The familiar QWERTY keyboard, developed by C. L. Sholes and C. Glidden, reached the market in 1874. In 1878 change-case keys were added that enabled the typing of both capital and small letters.



You should really read some history from reliable sources..look up the patent numbers I posted if you don't believe me..
Mindlessly repeating revisionist afro centric lies pushed by anti whites doesn't make you look very smart.
Negroes NEED something to "feel good" about and since their history doesn't offer many opportunities they try to steal credit for things they DIDN'T do/invent.
Don't buy into the lies. Educate yourself.




briannamichele said:
Elevator
Alexander Miles created an automatic mechanism that closed access to the shaft

Alexander Miles - The Improved Elevator of Alexander Miles

Garret Morgan
Gasmask

HowStuffWorks "Top 10 Inventions by African-Americans"

T Marshall did have a patent on what he named the "fire extinguisher" not the portable one we use to day but a mechanism that quickly releases pressurized water.

William Purvis

"William Purvis of Philadelphia invented and patented improvements to the fountain pen in 1890. William Purvis made several improvements to the fountain pen in order to make a "more durable, inexpensive, and better pen to carry in the pocket." Purvis used an elastic tube between the pen nib and the ink reservoir that used a suction action to return any excess ink to the ink reservoir, reducing ink spills and increasing the longevity of the ink. Fountain pens were first patented as early as 1809."

William Purvis - The Fountain Pens of William Purvis

Golf T
T Grant had a patents on improvements for the golf
Patent US638920 - Golf-tee. - Google Patents

Harp guitar
Robert Flemings had a patent of improved model harp guitar
https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA

Lyda Newman
Created a hairbrush for African Americans that could be easily be taken apart to be cleaned and then reconstructed
https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA

Handstamp William purvis
Created and improved model of self inking handstamp that could be uses for postal service and could stamp dates simultaneously.
https://www.google.com/patents/US27...a=X&ei=e1vRU8muKYOQyATPooCgCw&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA

J ricks had two separate patents on his improved horseshoes designed not only to protect the bottom of the hoof but wrap around the top for stability
https://www.google.com/patents/US62...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA

https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAQ

Sarah Boone - ironing board
"Boone's ironing board was designed to improve the quality of ironing sleeves and the bodies of women's garments. The board was very narrow, curved, and made of wood. The shape and structure allowed it to fit a sleeve and it was reversible, so one could iron both sides of the sleeve.[1]"

Sarah Boone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Albert burr - rotary lawn mower

"Albert Burr patented an improved rotary blade lawn mower. Burr designed a lawn mower with traction wheels and a rotary blade that was designed to not easily get plugged up from lawn clippings. John Albert Burr also improved the design of lawn mowers by making it possible to mow closer to building and wall edges."

John Albert Burr - The Green Lawns of John Albert Burr


J smiths - sprinkler DEBATABLE!!

there's still controversy over who created the first sprinkler. But j smith did create the first rotating sprinkler with 2 water exits that could be attached to a common water hose for either residential and agricultural use.

https://www.google.com/patents/US71...a=X&ei=zGDRU5HTFsSLyATcp4H4Cg&ved=0CBwQ6wEwAA

W A Martin- created the MODERN lock and update and improved version of the lock originally created by the Chinese with components from the Egyptians. First lock improvement in 4000 years.

https://www.google.com/patents/US40...a=X&ei=cGPRU4rRHoiayATH8oDgAg&ved=0CCoQ6wEwAg

Don't even get me started on Fredrick Jones you asshole! The man had 60 different patents including the FIRST practical refrigerating system for trucks and trains. Not to mention the 20 or more automotive patents he had that would forever change the automotive industry.


Frederick McKinley Jones - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Just stop, child. Those have already been debunked and proven as lies. Every single one.

Call me an "asshole" or anything you like. (You're obviously projecting)

The patent numbers, dates and descriptions are iron clad researchable facts. The things you listed were not invented by negroes. I've been through this before with way people way smarter and more experienced than you. Just give it up.

Trying to sneak in weasel words like "improved" and "modified" does NOT mean INVENTED.


You're way out of your league, little girl. Now go color or play with your dolls.
 
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I'll educate you to some reality [MENTION=50008]BriannaMichele[/MENTION];



The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

That's a lie, Brianna; Here's the truth;
first of all, your source is screwy. Most afro centrist sites allege that Jones invented a refrigerator unit for trucks and trains and Thomas Elkins or John Stanard allegedly invented the refrigerator...either way those are both lies and I'll debunk them here.

Thomas Elkins in 1879? John Stanard in 1891? No!

Oliver Evans proposed a mechanical refrigerator based on a vapor-compression cycle in 1805 and Jacob Perkins had a working machine built in 1834. Dr. John Gorrie created an air-cycle refrigeration system in about 1844, which he installed in a Florida hospital. In the 1850s Alexander Twining in the USA and James Harrison in Australia used mechanical refrigeration to produce ice on a commercial scale. Around the same time, the Carré brothers of France led the development of absorption refrigeration systems. A more detailed timeline

Stanard's patent describes not a refrigeration machine, but an old-fashioned icebox — an insulated cabinet into which ice is placed to cool the interior. As such, it was a "refrigerator" only in the old sense of the term, which included non-mechanical coolers. Elkins created a similarly low-tech cooler, acknowledging in his patent #221222 that "I am aware that chilling substances inclosed within a porous box or jar by wetting its outer surface is an old and well-known process."

Now the air conditioner;
Frederick Jones in 1949? No!

Dr. Willis Carrier built the first machine to control both the temperature and humidity of indoor air. He received the first of many patents in 1906 (US patent #808897, for the "Apparatus for Treating Air"). In 1911 he published the formulae that became the scientific basis for air conditioning design, and four years later formed the Carrier Engineering Corporation to develop and manufacture AC systems.


Now the refrigerated truck and train car;

Frederick Jones (with Joseph Numero) in 1938? Nope.

Refrigerated ships and railcars had been moving perishables across oceans and continents even before Jones was born. Trucks with mechanically refrigerated cargo spaces appeared on the roads at least as early as the late 1920s.

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

Come on..every middle school child knows better than that..Well, they USED to know better...Now afro centrists claim negroes invented everything.

Poor Richard's Almanack (sometimes Almanac) was a yearly almanac published by Benjamin Franklin, who adopted the pseudonym of "Poor Richard" or "Richard Saunders" for this purpose. The publication appeared continually from 1732 to 1758. It was a best seller for a pamphlet published in the American colonies; print runs reached 10,000 per year.[1][2]

Your source is screwy;


Granville Woods in 1904? No!

In 1869, a 22-year-old George Westinghouse received US patent #88929 for a brake device operated by compressed air, and in the same year organized the Westinghouse Air Brake Company. Many of the 361 patents he accumulated during his career were for air brake variations and improvements, including his first "automatic" version in 1872 (US #124404).





Richard Spikes in 1932? Nope.

The first automatic-transmission automobile to enter the market was designed by the Sturtevant brothers of Massachusetts in 1904. US Patent #766551 was the first of several patents on their gearshift mechanism. Automatic transmission technology continued to develop, spawning hundreds of patents and numerous experimental units; but because of cost, reliability issues and an initial lack of demand, several decades passed before vehicles with automatic transmission became common on the roads.





Isaac R. Johnson in 1899? Nope.

Comte Mede de Sivrac and Karl von Sauerbronn built primitive versions of the bicycle in 1791 and 1816 respectively. The frame of John Starley's 1885 "safety bicycle" resembled that of a modern bicycle.





Dr. Charles Drew in 1940? Nope.

During World War I, Dr. Oswald H. Robertson of the US army preserved blood in a citrate-glucose solution and stored it in cooled containers for later transfusion. This was the first use of "banked" blood. By the mid-1930s the Russians had set up a national network of facilities for the collection, typing, and storage of blood. Bernard Fantus, influenced by the Russian program, established the first hospital blood bank in the United States at Chicago's Cook County Hospital in 1937. It was Fantus who coined the term "blood bank."

Did Charles Drew "discover" (in about 1940) that plasma could be separated and stored apart from the rest of the blood, thereby revolutionizing transfusion medicine? Nope.

The possibility of using blood plasma for transfusion purposes was known at least since 1918, when English physician Gordon R. Ward suggested it in a medical journal. In the mid-1930s, John Elliott advanced the idea, emphasizing plasma's advantages in shelf life and donor-recipient compatibility, and in 1939 he and two colleagues reported having used stored plasma in 191 transfusions. Charles Drew was not responsible for any breakthrough scientific or medical discovery; his main career achievement lay in supervising or co-supervising major programs for the collection and shipment of blood and plasma.





Come on Brianna...ReallY? Did you finish high school?
Here's the truth about cellular phones;
Henry T. Sampson in 1971? Nope.

On July 6, 1971, Sampson and co-inventor George Miley received a patent on a "gamma electric cell" that converted a gamma ray input into an electrical output (Among the first to do that was Bernhard Gross, US patent #3122640, 1964). What, you ask, does gamma radiation have to do with cellular communications technology? The answer: nothing. Some multiculturalist pseudo-historian must have seen the words "electric" and "cell" and thought "cell phone."

The father of the cell phone is Martin Cooper who first demonstrated the technology in 1973.




Too stupid to even consider; You think people pissed on the floor before this negro "invented" something to piss in?



George T. Sampson in 1892? Nope.

The "clothes-drier" described in Sampson's patent was actually a rack for holding clothes near a stove, and was intended as an "improvement" on similar contraptions:

My invention relates to improvements in clothes-driers.... The object of my invention is to suspend clothing in close relation to a stove by means of frames so constructed that they can be readily placed in proper position and put aside when not required for use.

US patent #476416, 1892

Nineteen years earlier, there were already over 300 US patents for such "clothes-driers" (Subject-Matter Index of Patents...1790 to 1873).

A Frenchman named Pochon in 1799 built the first known tumble dryer — a crank-driven, rotating metal drum pierced with ventilation holes and held over heat. Electric tumble dryers appeared in the first half of the 20th century.




Another one too stupid to even consider.
You think no curtains were ever hung in any window until this negro "invented" a stick to hold them up? LMAO..You didn't graduate from high school, did you?


Too stupid to consider..so you allege that the negro above "invented" a "curtain rod" in 1889...but it couldn't be used until THIS negro "invented" a "curtain rod support" in 1896?
LMFAO...so the curtains had rods through them but no way to hang them and they lay on the floor until 1896..LMAO..really, girl..get serious


Too stupid to consider;




LMAO..really?. No one ever propped a door open until this negro allegedly "invented" a "door stop"?
Look..I'm not going to go one by one and debunk these..some of these lies are just too stupid to address...




LMAO..dust and dirt just lay on the floor for centuries until this negro "invented a "dust pan"?...silly little girl;
Lloyd P. Ray in 1897? Nope.
While the ultimate origin of the dustpan is lost in the mists (dusts?) of time, at least we know that US patent #20811 for "Dust-pan" was granted to T.E. McNeill in 1858. That was the first of about 164 US dustpan patents predating Lloyd Ray's.


egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

Willie Johnson in 1884? Nope.

The hand-cranked egg beater with two intermeshed, counter-rotating whisks was invented by Turner Williams of Providence, Rhode Island in 1870 (US Patent #103811). It was an improvement on earlier rotary egg beaters that had only one whisk.


electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

A heinous lie!


jesus h. christ! Everyone knows edison invented that but your "source" is ridiculously flawed. Most afro centrist liars claim latimer "invented" a filament for the bulb...and that is ALSO a heinous lie;
Lewis Latimer invented the carbon filament in 1881 or 1882? Nope.

English chemist/physicist Joseph Swan experimented with a carbon-filament incandescent light all the way back in 1860, and by 1878 had developed a better design which he patented in Britain. On the other side of the Atlantic, Thomas Edison developed a successful carbon-filament bulb, receiving a patent for it (#223898) in January 1880, before Lewis Latimer did any work in electric lighting. From 1880 onward, countless patents were issued for innovations in filament design and manufacture (Edison had over 50 of them). Neither of Latimer's two filament-related patents in 1881 and 1882 were among them, nor did they make the light bulb last longer, nor is there reason to believe they were adopted outside Hiram Maxim's company where Latimer worked at the time. (He was not hired by Edison's company until 1884, primarily as a draftsman and an expert witness in patent litigations).

Latimer also did not come up with the first screw socket for the light bulb or the first book on electric lighting.


I'm going to continue in another post because I've done this before with afro revisionists and I always run out of room in one post.

...continued;

Strange....or maybe not...where are your links????? :eusa_whistle: :eusa_whistle:
 
Elevator
Alexander Miles created an automatic mechanism that closed access to the shaft

Alexander Miles - The Improved Elevator of Alexander Miles

Garret Morgan
Gasmask

HowStuffWorks "Top 10 Inventions by African-Americans"

T Marshall did have a patent on what he named the "fire extinguisher" not the portable one we use to day but a mechanism that quickly releases pressurized water.

William Purvis

"William Purvis of Philadelphia invented and patented improvements to the fountain pen in 1890. William Purvis made several improvements to the fountain pen in order to make a "more durable, inexpensive, and better pen to carry in the pocket." Purvis used an elastic tube between the pen nib and the ink reservoir that used a suction action to return any excess ink to the ink reservoir, reducing ink spills and increasing the longevity of the ink. Fountain pens were first patented as early as 1809."

William Purvis - The Fountain Pens of William Purvis

Golf T
T Grant had a patents on improvements for the golf
Patent US638920 - Golf-tee. - Google Patents

Harp guitar
Robert Flemings had a patent of improved model harp guitar
https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA

Lyda Newman
Created a hairbrush for African Americans that could be easily be taken apart to be cleaned and then reconstructed
https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA

Handstamp William purvis
Created and improved model of self inking handstamp that could be uses for postal service and could stamp dates simultaneously.
https://www.google.com/patents/US27...a=X&ei=e1vRU8muKYOQyATPooCgCw&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA

J ricks had two separate patents on his improved horseshoes designed not only to protect the bottom of the hoof but wrap around the top for stability
https://www.google.com/patents/US62...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA

https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAQ

Sarah Boone - ironing board
"Boone's ironing board was designed to improve the quality of ironing sleeves and the bodies of women's garments. The board was very narrow, curved, and made of wood. The shape and structure allowed it to fit a sleeve and it was reversible, so one could iron both sides of the sleeve.[1]"

Sarah Boone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Albert burr - rotary lawn mower

"Albert Burr patented an improved rotary blade lawn mower. Burr designed a lawn mower with traction wheels and a rotary blade that was designed to not easily get plugged up from lawn clippings. John Albert Burr also improved the design of lawn mowers by making it possible to mow closer to building and wall edges."

John Albert Burr - The Green Lawns of John Albert Burr


J smiths - sprinkler DEBATABLE!!

there's still controversy over who created the first sprinkler. But j smith did create the first rotating sprinkler with 2 water exits that could be attached to a common water hose for either residential and agricultural use.

https://www.google.com/patents/US71...a=X&ei=zGDRU5HTFsSLyATcp4H4Cg&ved=0CBwQ6wEwAA

W A Martin- created the MODERN lock and update and improved version of the lock originally created by the Chinese with components from the Egyptians. First lock improvement in 4000 years.

https://www.google.com/patents/US40...a=X&ei=cGPRU4rRHoiayATH8oDgAg&ved=0CCoQ6wEwAg

Don't even get me started on Fredrick Jones you asshole! The man had 60 different patents including the FIRST practical refrigerating system for trucks and trains. Not to mention the 20 or more automotive patents he had that would forever change the automotive industry.


Frederick McKinley Jones - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


I'd keep going but doing my hair is more important than arguing with a racist prick

















•Pinky•

Bet you did your homework this time.:D
 
If you actually took the time to look, every link I've posted lists a patent number and I've looked through and read the actual patents myself. And where's your evidence that none of these people are African american? Where's you proof that these inventors are all imaginary? Your fuckin crazy dude. I can't believe your willing to lie through your teeth just to undermine the accomplishments of black. You must be really bitter


•Pinky•
 
Elevator

Alexander Miles created an automatic mechanism that closed access to the shaft



Alexander Miles - The Improved Elevator of Alexander Miles



Garret Morgan

Gasmask



HowStuffWorks "Top 10 Inventions by African-Americans"



T Marshall did have a patent on what he named the "fire extinguisher" not the portable one we use to day but a mechanism that quickly releases pressurized water.



William Purvis



"William Purvis of Philadelphia invented and patented improvements to the fountain pen in 1890. William Purvis made several improvements to the fountain pen in order to make a "more durable, inexpensive, and better pen to carry in the pocket." Purvis used an elastic tube between the pen nib and the ink reservoir that used a suction action to return any excess ink to the ink reservoir, reducing ink spills and increasing the longevity of the ink. Fountain pens were first patented as early as 1809."



William Purvis - The Fountain Pens of William Purvis



Golf T

T Grant had a patents on improvements for the golf

Patent US638920 - Golf-tee. - Google Patents



Harp guitar

Robert Flemings had a patent of improved model harp guitar

https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA



Lyda Newman

Created a hairbrush for African Americans that could be easily be taken apart to be cleaned and then reconstructed

https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=vFXRU7HRJszcoATxzYKQBQ&ved=0CB0Q6AEwAA



Handstamp William purvis

Created and improved model of self inking handstamp that could be uses for postal service and could stamp dates simultaneously.

https://www.google.com/patents/US27...a=X&ei=e1vRU8muKYOQyATPooCgCw&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA



J ricks had two separate patents on his improved horseshoes designed not only to protect the bottom of the hoof but wrap around the top for stability

https://www.google.com/patents/US62...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA



https://www.google.com/patents/US33...a=X&ei=7lzRU-HWPMGuyATnsoDIBQ&ved=0CCIQ6AEwAQ



Sarah Boone - ironing board

"Boone's ironing board was designed to improve the quality of ironing sleeves and the bodies of women's garments. The board was very narrow, curved, and made of wood. The shape and structure allowed it to fit a sleeve and it was reversible, so one could iron both sides of the sleeve.[1]"



Sarah Boone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Albert burr - rotary lawn mower



"Albert Burr patented an improved rotary blade lawn mower. Burr designed a lawn mower with traction wheels and a rotary blade that was designed to not easily get plugged up from lawn clippings. John Albert Burr also improved the design of lawn mowers by making it possible to mow closer to building and wall edges."



John Albert Burr - The Green Lawns of John Albert Burr





J smiths - sprinkler DEBATABLE!!



there's still controversy over who created the first sprinkler. But j smith did create the first rotating sprinkler with 2 water exits that could be attached to a common water hose for either residential and agricultural use.



https://www.google.com/patents/US71...a=X&ei=zGDRU5HTFsSLyATcp4H4Cg&ved=0CBwQ6wEwAA



W A Martin- created the MODERN lock and update and improved version of the lock originally created by the Chinese with components from the Egyptians. First lock improvement in 4000 years.



https://www.google.com/patents/US40...a=X&ei=cGPRU4rRHoiayATH8oDgAg&ved=0CCoQ6wEwAg



Don't even get me started on Fredrick Jones you asshole! The man had 60 different patents including the FIRST practical refrigerating system for trucks and trains. Not to mention the 20 or more automotive patents he had that would forever change the automotive industry.





Frederick McKinley Jones - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia





I'd keep going but doing my hair is more important than arguing with a racist prick



































•Pinky•
Bet you did your homework this time.:D




Yeah but nothing's ever good enough for a racist. Now he's saying these people and their patents are made up or some shit. He's a looney.






•Pinky•
 
I'll educate you to some reality [MENTION=50008]BriannaMichele[/MENTION];



The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

That's a lie, Brianna; Here's the truth;
first of all, your source is screwy. Most afro centrist sites allege that Jones invented a refrigerator unit for trucks and trains and Thomas Elkins or John Stanard allegedly invented the refrigerator...either way those are both lies and I'll debunk them here.

Thomas Elkins in 1879? John Stanard in 1891? No!

Oliver Evans proposed a mechanical refrigerator based on a vapor-compression cycle in 1805 and Jacob Perkins had a working machine built in 1834. Dr. John Gorrie created an air-cycle refrigeration system in about 1844, which he installed in a Florida hospital. In the 1850s Alexander Twining in the USA and James Harrison in Australia used mechanical refrigeration to produce ice on a commercial scale. Around the same time, the Carré brothers of France led the development of absorption refrigeration systems. A more detailed timeline

Stanard's patent describes not a refrigeration machine, but an old-fashioned icebox — an insulated cabinet into which ice is placed to cool the interior. As such, it was a "refrigerator" only in the old sense of the term, which included non-mechanical coolers. Elkins created a similarly low-tech cooler, acknowledging in his patent #221222 that "I am aware that chilling substances inclosed within a porous box or jar by wetting its outer surface is an old and well-known process."

Now the air conditioner;
Frederick Jones in 1949? No!

Dr. Willis Carrier built the first machine to control both the temperature and humidity of indoor air. He received the first of many patents in 1906 (US patent #808897, for the "Apparatus for Treating Air"). In 1911 he published the formulae that became the scientific basis for air conditioning design, and four years later formed the Carrier Engineering Corporation to develop and manufacture AC systems.


Now the refrigerated truck and train car;

Frederick Jones (with Joseph Numero) in 1938? Nope.

Refrigerated ships and railcars had been moving perishables across oceans and continents even before Jones was born. Trucks with mechanically refrigerated cargo spaces appeared on the roads at least as early as the late 1920s.



Come on..every middle school child knows better than that..Well, they USED to know better...Now afro centrists claim negroes invented everything.

Poor Richard's Almanack (sometimes Almanac) was a yearly almanac published by Benjamin Franklin, who adopted the pseudonym of "Poor Richard" or "Richard Saunders" for this purpose. The publication appeared continually from 1732 to 1758. It was a best seller for a pamphlet published in the American colonies; print runs reached 10,000 per year.[1][2]

Your source is screwy;


Granville Woods in 1904? No!

In 1869, a 22-year-old George Westinghouse received US patent #88929 for a brake device operated by compressed air, and in the same year organized the Westinghouse Air Brake Company. Many of the 361 patents he accumulated during his career were for air brake variations and improvements, including his first "automatic" version in 1872 (US #124404).





Richard Spikes in 1932? Nope.

The first automatic-transmission automobile to enter the market was designed by the Sturtevant brothers of Massachusetts in 1904. US Patent #766551 was the first of several patents on their gearshift mechanism. Automatic transmission technology continued to develop, spawning hundreds of patents and numerous experimental units; but because of cost, reliability issues and an initial lack of demand, several decades passed before vehicles with automatic transmission became common on the roads.





Isaac R. Johnson in 1899? Nope.

Comte Mede de Sivrac and Karl von Sauerbronn built primitive versions of the bicycle in 1791 and 1816 respectively. The frame of John Starley's 1885 "safety bicycle" resembled that of a modern bicycle.





Dr. Charles Drew in 1940? Nope.

During World War I, Dr. Oswald H. Robertson of the US army preserved blood in a citrate-glucose solution and stored it in cooled containers for later transfusion. This was the first use of "banked" blood. By the mid-1930s the Russians had set up a national network of facilities for the collection, typing, and storage of blood. Bernard Fantus, influenced by the Russian program, established the first hospital blood bank in the United States at Chicago's Cook County Hospital in 1937. It was Fantus who coined the term "blood bank."

Did Charles Drew "discover" (in about 1940) that plasma could be separated and stored apart from the rest of the blood, thereby revolutionizing transfusion medicine? Nope.

The possibility of using blood plasma for transfusion purposes was known at least since 1918, when English physician Gordon R. Ward suggested it in a medical journal. In the mid-1930s, John Elliott advanced the idea, emphasizing plasma's advantages in shelf life and donor-recipient compatibility, and in 1939 he and two colleagues reported having used stored plasma in 191 transfusions. Charles Drew was not responsible for any breakthrough scientific or medical discovery; his main career achievement lay in supervising or co-supervising major programs for the collection and shipment of blood and plasma.





Come on Brianna...ReallY? Did you finish high school?
Here's the truth about cellular phones;
Henry T. Sampson in 1971? Nope.

On July 6, 1971, Sampson and co-inventor George Miley received a patent on a "gamma electric cell" that converted a gamma ray input into an electrical output (Among the first to do that was Bernhard Gross, US patent #3122640, 1964). What, you ask, does gamma radiation have to do with cellular communications technology? The answer: nothing. Some multiculturalist pseudo-historian must have seen the words "electric" and "cell" and thought "cell phone."

The father of the cell phone is Martin Cooper who first demonstrated the technology in 1973.




Too stupid to even consider; You think people pissed on the floor before this negro "invented" something to piss in?



George T. Sampson in 1892? Nope.

The "clothes-drier" described in Sampson's patent was actually a rack for holding clothes near a stove, and was intended as an "improvement" on similar contraptions:

My invention relates to improvements in clothes-driers.... The object of my invention is to suspend clothing in close relation to a stove by means of frames so constructed that they can be readily placed in proper position and put aside when not required for use.

US patent #476416, 1892

Nineteen years earlier, there were already over 300 US patents for such "clothes-driers" (Subject-Matter Index of Patents...1790 to 1873).

A Frenchman named Pochon in 1799 built the first known tumble dryer — a crank-driven, rotating metal drum pierced with ventilation holes and held over heat. Electric tumble dryers appeared in the first half of the 20th century.




Another one too stupid to even consider.
You think no curtains were ever hung in any window until this negro "invented" a stick to hold them up? LMAO..You didn't graduate from high school, did you?


Too stupid to consider..so you allege that the negro above "invented" a "curtain rod" in 1889...but it couldn't be used until THIS negro "invented" a "curtain rod support" in 1896?
LMFAO...so the curtains had rods through them but no way to hang them and they lay on the floor until 1896..LMAO..really, girl..get serious


Too stupid to consider;




LMAO..really?. No one ever propped a door open until this negro allegedly "invented" a "door stop"?
Look..I'm not going to go one by one and debunk these..some of these lies are just too stupid to address...




LMAO..dust and dirt just lay on the floor for centuries until this negro "invented a "dust pan"?...silly little girl;
Lloyd P. Ray in 1897? Nope.
While the ultimate origin of the dustpan is lost in the mists (dusts?) of time, at least we know that US patent #20811 for "Dust-pan" was granted to T.E. McNeill in 1858. That was the first of about 164 US dustpan patents predating Lloyd Ray's.




Willie Johnson in 1884? Nope.

The hand-cranked egg beater with two intermeshed, counter-rotating whisks was invented by Turner Williams of Providence, Rhode Island in 1870 (US Patent #103811). It was an improvement on earlier rotary egg beaters that had only one whisk.


electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

A heinous lie!


jesus h. christ! Everyone knows edison invented that but your "source" is ridiculously flawed. Most afro centrist liars claim latimer "invented" a filament for the bulb...and that is ALSO a heinous lie;
Lewis Latimer invented the carbon filament in 1881 or 1882? Nope.

English chemist/physicist Joseph Swan experimented with a carbon-filament incandescent light all the way back in 1860, and by 1878 had developed a better design which he patented in Britain. On the other side of the Atlantic, Thomas Edison developed a successful carbon-filament bulb, receiving a patent for it (#223898) in January 1880, before Lewis Latimer did any work in electric lighting. From 1880 onward, countless patents were issued for innovations in filament design and manufacture (Edison had over 50 of them). Neither of Latimer's two filament-related patents in 1881 and 1882 were among them, nor did they make the light bulb last longer, nor is there reason to believe they were adopted outside Hiram Maxim's company where Latimer worked at the time. (He was not hired by Edison's company until 1884, primarily as a draftsman and an expert witness in patent litigations).

Latimer also did not come up with the first screw socket for the light bulb or the first book on electric lighting.


I'm going to continue in another post because I've done this before with afro revisionists and I always run out of room in one post.

...continued;

Strange....or maybe not...where are your links????? :eusa_whistle: :eusa_whistle:

See those patent numbers, whistling negro? :eusa_whistle:

Read the thread again if you need to. It's all proven and researchable..names...dates...patent numbers, articles published...

now go blow some air between your lips whistling negro. :eusa_whistle::eusa_whistle:
 
If you actually took the time to look, every link I've posted lists a patent number and I've looked through and read the actual patents myself. And where's your evidence that none of these people are African american? Where's you proof that these inventors are all imaginary? Your fuckin crazy dude. I can't believe your willing to lie through your teeth just to undermine the accomplishments of black. You must be really bitter


•Pinky•

Go do your hair or nails..or play with your dolls, sweetie...you're done here.
 
$ImageUploadedByUSMessageBoard.com1406233954.808323.jpg


•Pinky•
 
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