Also known as Granville Woods
amerikansk uppfinnare
5 total works indexed
· 2020 · cited 34,740x
· 2005 · cited 8,674x
· 2014 · cited 8,019x
· 2000 · cited 4,697x
· 2018 · cited 4,221x
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Granville Tailer Woods, född 23 april 1856 i Columbus i Ohio i USA, död 30 januari 1910 i New York City i New York i USA), var en afroamerikansk uppfinnare med mer än 50 patent. Woods var också den första amerikan med afrikanska anor som arbetade som ingenjör inom maskinteknik- och elektroteknik efter amerikanska inbördeskriget. Självlärd, koncentrerade han mest av sitt arbete till tåg och spårväg. En av hans anmärkningsvärda uppfinningar var Multiplex Telegraph, en enhet som skickade meddelanden mellan järnvägsstationer och rörliga tåg. Hans arbete försäkrade en säkrare och bättre kollektivtrafik för städerna i USA.
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Granville T. Woods, Inventor Known as ‘Black Edison’ - The New York Times
Woods was the most prolific black inventor at the turn of the 19th century, but when he died, he was all but forgotten, buried in an unmarked grave.
nytimes.com →Nina Mae McKinney in “Hallelujah!” produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios in 1929. Oscar Micheaux directing a scene as seen in “Pioneers of African American Cinema" by Kino International. Martin Sostre in conversation with the warden in "Frame-Up: The Imprisonment of Martin Sostre" produced by Pacific Street Films. Gladys Bentley performing on “You Bet Your Life" with Groucho Marx produced by NBC. Dondi presenting his work from “Style Wars” courtesy of Public Art Films, Inc. These remarkable black men and women never received obituaries in The New York Times — until now. We’re adding their stories to our project about prominent people whose deaths were not reported by the newspaper. He carefully sealed the drawings in a mailing tube and quietly placed them out of sight from his business partner, then went to a meeting. But when he returned, Granville T. Woods found that his drawings — a design for a novel invention that held the potential to revolutionize transportation around the world — were gone. Since 1851, The New York Times has published thousands of obituaries, capturing the lives and legacies of people who have influenced the world in which we live. We started the series last year by focusing on women like Sylvia Plath , the postwar poet; Emma Gatewood , the hiking grandmother who captivated a nation; and Ana Mendieta , the Cuban artist whose work was bold, raw and sometimes violent. We added to that collection each week. Now, this special edition of Overlooked highlights a prominent group of black men and women whose lives we did not examine at the time of their deaths. Many of them were a generation removed from slavery. They often attempted to break the same barriers again and again. Sometimes they made myth out of a painful history, misrepresenting their past to gain a better footing in their future. Some managed to achieve success in their lifetimes, only to die penniless, buried in unmarked graves. But all were pioneers, shaping our world and making paths for future generations. We hope you’ll spread the word about Overlooked — and tell us about others we’ve missed. Read about the project’s first year , and use this form to nominate a candidate for future Overlooked obits. In her top hat and tuxedo, Gladys Bentley belted out gender-bending tunes, becoming ’20s-era Harlem royalty. Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture W HEN IT COMES to loosening social mores, progress that isn’t made in private has often taken place onstage. That was certainly the case at the Clam House, a Prohibition-era speakeasy in Harlem, where Gladys Bentley, one of the boldest performers of her era, held court. Scott Joplin circa 1904. He would come to be revered as a ragtime giant and an in-demand performer. Michael Ochs Archives, via Getty Images In the post-Civil War era, the cruel breath of slavery and the aborted plan of Reconstruction still hung over the American South. But in the Joplin home, banjo and fiddle music filled the family’s evenings, giving the children — Scott in particular — a sense of music’s power to move. Margaret Garner, who was born as an enslaved girl, almost certainly did not plan to kill her child when she grew up and became an enslaved mother. But she also couldn’t yet know that the physical, emotional and psychological violence of slavery, relentless and horrific, would one day conspire to force her maternal judgment in a moment already fraught with grave imperative. The cyclist Major Taylor in 1898. He traveled the globe, racing as far away as Australia, and became known as the “Black Cyclone.” Science History Images/Alamy More than 100 years ago, one of the most popular spectator sports in the world was bicycle racing, and one of the most popular racers was a squat, strapping man with bulging thighs named Major Taylor. The fashion designer Zelda Wynn Valdes, who could fit a dress to a body of any size. Dance Theater of Harlem More than a half
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