• Complain

Baker - America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World

Here you can read online Baker - America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: s.l, year: 2016, publisher: Artisan, genre: History. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover
  • Book:
    America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    Artisan
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2016
  • City:
    s.l
  • Rating:
    3 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 60
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Among the many rewards of America the Ingenious, Kevin Bakers survey of Yankee know-how, is stumbling on its buried nuggets. . . . Baker examines a wide range of the achievements that have made, and still make, America great againand again. The Wall Street Journal All made in America: The skyscraper and subway car. The telephone and telegraph. The safety elevator and safety pin. Plus the microprocessor, amusement park, MRI, supermarket, Pennsylvania rifle, and Tennessee Valley Authority. Not to mention the city of Chicago or jazz or that magnificent Golden Gate Bridge. What is it about America that makes it a nation of inventors, tinkerers, researchers, and adventurersobsessive pursuers of the never-before-created? And, equally, what is it that makes America such a fertile place to explore, discover, and launch the next big thing? In America the Ingenious, bestselling author Kevin Baker brings his gift of storytelling and eye for historical detail to the grand, and grandly entertaining, tale of American innovation. Here are the Edisons and Bells and Carnegies, and the stories of how they followed their passions and changed our world. And also the less celebrated, like Jacob Youphes and Loeb Strauss, two Jewish immigrants from Germany who transformed the way at least half the world now dresses (hint: Levi Strauss). And Leo Fender, who couldnt play a note of music, midwifing rock n roll through his solid-body electric guitar and amplifier. And the many women who werent legally recognized as inventors, but who created things to make their lives easier that we use every daylike Josephine Cochran, inventor of the dishwasher, or Marion OBrien Donovan, who invented a waterproof diaper cover. Or a guy with the improbable name of Philo Farnsworth, who, with his invention of television, upended communication as significantly as Gutenberg did. At a time when America struggles with different visions of what it wants to be, America the Ingenious shows the extraordinary power of what works: how immigration leads to innovation, what a strong government and strong public education mean to a climate of positive practical change, and why taking the long view instead of looking for short-term gain pays off many times over, not only for investors and inventors, but for the rest of us whose lives are made better by the new. America and its nation of immigrants have excelled at taking ideas from anywhere and transforming them into the startling, often unexpectedly beautiful creations that have shaped our world. This is that story.

Baker: author's other books


Who wrote America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Kevin Baker AMERICA THE INGENIOUS How a Nation of Dreamers Immigrants and - photo 1

Kevin Baker

AMERICA
THE
INGENIOUS

How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World

Illustrations by Chris Dent

Picture 2

New York

To all the niblings, Ari, Anik, Jackson, Zoe, Julian, and Griffin, with high hopes for the wondrous world they will grow up in

And as always, with love
to Ellen

Contents

ROAMING

TRAINS

COMMUNICATING

COMPUTING

APPAREL

WOMEN INVENTORS

BUILDING

POWERING

FIGHTING

CURING

PRODUCING

PLAYING

The American Genius

The American genius is a unique one As befits a nation of immigrants America - photo 3

The American genius is a unique one. As befits a nation of immigrants, America has excelled at taking ideas from anywhere and transforming them into the practical, startling, often unexpectedly beautiful creations that have shaped our world.

We are a nation of tinkerers, never content to leave a thing alone. Born inventors, researchers, adventurers, we keep seeking whats next, whats better, whats more fun, what will make more money. As the first country to exist wholly in the modern age, we have also had to invent and constantly reinvent ourselvesour institutions, our customs, even our definition of who is an American, and what that means.

These are the stories of some of the best things that weve taken upwho did them, how they were done, what they meant. The list is an eclectic one, and highly subjective, moving freely from the skyscraper to the subway, the safety elevator to the space elevator, the Pennsylvania rifle to the video game. They include many of our most important and famous innovations, such as the telephone, the transistor, and the farm combine, as well as more pedestrian inventions that nonetheless transformed daily life for millions: the sewing machine, air-conditioning, the electric guitarall the way down to the humble safety pin.

Here you will find many things that arent generally included in books about inventions: blues and jazz, our greatest cities, the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). Why not? They were invented by people just as much as anything else in this book, and they are constantly cited by others as some of our greatest creations.

Here, as well, are inventions whose utility ended years ago, but that changed the world in their day, such as the telegraph, or the Yankee clipper. Inventions that have declined in importance, such as dried blood plasma, but may yet again play a crucial role in the near future. Innovations that were simply, stunningly beautiful, such as the streamlined automobiles, planes, and trains of the 1930sand which also represented a gigantic step forward in technological research and application.

And here, too, you will find a glimpse of an equally dazzling future that is already beginning to emerge. Will we zip around in flying carsor driverless ones? Build prosthetics that work better than our arms and legs? Climb into space on a single cable the thickness of a thread? The answers are likely to be as amazing as all the earlier creations here first seemed when they came into being.

The inventions in this book are inextricably linked to the American experiment. They were inspired, shaped, and made possible by the character of our country.

This is not to say that Americans invented everything. Far from it. Throughout history, very little was invented solely in one nation or by one person working alone. The American inventions cited here were inspired by ideas, theories, and prototypes going all the way back to the toga-cleaning facilities of ancient Greece and Rome; the ninth-century printing presses of China, Korea, and Japan; even the iron-chain suspension bridges thrown across the chasms of the Himalayas by a Buddhist saint in 1430.

The Western world at the outset of the industrial age was a particular hotbed of invention. New discoveries and their applications poured out of Europe and, especially, Great Britain, and credit often remains disputed to this day. To peruse the Internet is to gain the idea that everything in the world was invented by the English, which is to say, a Scotsman.

The fact is that many of the inventions in this book were indeed first conceived of, or even first made a working reality, in other countries, and to the extent that space allows, they are freely credited here. Others were invented at virtually the same time in America as they were elsewhere, with the advances in each nation sometimes feeding off one another.

In every case, though, each one of these devices, structures, remedies, systems, styles, enterprises, and entertainments were fully realized in America. If they were not wholly invented in the United States, it was here that they were made commercially viable, widespread, affordable, beloved, indispensable.

More important than whether Americans came up with everything first is the fact that we were once, at least, able and willing to learn from others. To take what was dreamed up anywhere around the world and improve on it. (Or even, in the case of magnetic tape recording, cart the basic idea off as a spoil of war.)

What were some of the other keys to our inventiveness?

Freedom. Yes, you did build that. What comes across at every turn in studying the history of American innovation is that this is what free men (and women) can do when afforded the liberty to pursue whatever they wish. Whether its the genius of an Alexander Graham Bell, the dogged persistence of a Thomas Edison, the entrepreneurship of an Andrew Carnegie or a Henry Ford, the courage of a Walter Reed, or even the sheer, exasperating eccentricity of a Walter Hunt, the value of the individual shines through.

We all built that. Beyond the obvious heroes, I have tried here to demonstrate how much we owe to all the ordinary people who made our progress a reality. The generations of anonymous pioneers who gave us the Conestoga wagon, and then adapted it into the prairie schooner. The trail of craftsmen along the eighteenth-century frontier who perfected and built the Pennsylvania rifle. The nameless Irish navvies who dug out the Erie Canal by hand; the black and white sandhogs who looked death in the face every day as they carved out the tunnels beneath New Yorks rivers.

Their contributions, and those of countless others, were as valuable as anyones in making us all that we are and giving us all that we have.

Government matters. Rugged individualism aside, the history of American invention shows again and again that governmentwhich in a democracy, again, means all of usis vital. It was government that set the rules, with patent law that settled what otherwise would have been interminable legal battles over inventions from the cotton gin to the automobile; that rescued countless small inventors, such as Philo Farnsworth, inventor of electronic television, and Elias Howe, of sewing machine fame, from predatory forces that would have stolen their creations; that set up antitrust regulations, and in so doing spurred the invention of everything from the modern oil rig to Silicon Valley; that so often put up the cash to sponsor projects from the Trancontinental Railroad to the space race, the telegraph to the Hoover Dam; that provided the money for a first-class public education system and countless research grants and laboratories; that has freely picked winners, right down to Abe Lincoln testing a repeating rifle himself on the Washington Mall during the Civil War.

Immigration is crucial. Over and over, in researching this book, I was struck by just how much of America was made by immigrants. Many of these, of course, were those anonymous men and women who did the hard work of hauling and digging, riveting and welding. But beyond arm and back, so many contributed their brains, as well. What would America have been without them? Not just the more famous ones such as Bell, Carnegie, or A. P. Giannini, but also Carl Breer, son of a German immigrant, who led a revolution in car design; or Richard Hoe, son of an English immigrant printer, who gave us the rotary press; or Jacob Youphes and Loeb Strauss, two young Jewish men who came to America, changed their names to Jacob Davis and Levi Strauss, and gave us blue jeans.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World»

Look at similar books to America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World»

Discussion, reviews of the book America the Ingenious [eBook - Biblioboard]: How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.