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Found 91 Stories
Portrait painting of Charles Drew, wearing a lab coat and holding a microscope
Blog

Diverse Voices: Blood Transfusion Pioneer Dr. Charles Drew

Raise a pint (of blood) in honor of Dr. Charles Drew’s life-saving research and inventions!

A detail from the logo banner for Military Invention Day 2018, showing stylized drawings of an armored vehicle, a parachute, a hypodermic syringe, a scuba diver, an integrated circuit, and a drafting compass, set among a mosaic of squares in shades of green, brown, and blue.
Invention Stories

Military Invention Day 2019

Come to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History on Saturday, May 18, to see leading-edge technologies from armed forces research, meet scientists and engineers, and try your hand at family-friendly invention challenges.

Military Invention Day logo: a pixelated head in profile surrounded by icons representing inventions
Invention Stories

Military Invention Day 2018

Come to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History on Saturday, May 19, to see leading-edge technologies from armed forces research, meet scientists and engineers, and try your hand at family-friendly invention challenges.

Logo for Military Invention Day showing a stylized head in profile with simple drawings of gears and many inventions trailing from the back of the head
Beyond Words

Military Invention Day 2017 Highlights

Missed Military Invention Day 2017? Here are some highlights from this great festival—mark your calendars for 2018!

William J. Hammer seated among his large collection of scientific and experimental apparatus
Blog

In Uncle Sam’s Service: WWI Inventor William J. Hammer

Inventor William J. Hammer was one of thousands of patriotic inventors who mobilized for World War I.

Military Invention Day logo: a pixelated head in profile surrounded by icons representing inventions
Invention Stories

Military Invention Day 2017

Inventions for the Armed Forces, Innovations for Society

Tappan Model RL-1 microwave oven
Blog

The Devil Is in the Details: Researching an Inventor’s Biography

The quest to confirm biographical details about the life and work of Percy Spencer

A LCVP (Landing Craft, Vehicle, Personnel) created by Higgins Industries
Blog

New Orleans, Louisiana: Higgins Boats

During World War II, Higgins Industries grew to over 20,000 workers to meet demand.

2015 Lemelson Fellow Stephen B. Adams
Beyond Words

Video Lecture: Before the Garage: Beginnings of Silicon Valley, 1909–1960

Stephen Adams, Lemelson Center Fellow and Professor at Salisbury University examines the origins of the Silicon Valley as we know it today.

Hedy Lamarr
Invention Stories

A Movie Star, Some Player Pianos, and Torpedoes

Hedy Lamarr was dubbed the most beautiful woman in Hollywood, but she was more interested in inventing than in idle compliments.

Higgins Industries shop floor. Courtesy of The National WWII Museum
Places of Invention

Birth of a Slogan: the Higgins Worker

Over 20,000 individuals contributed to WWII through their work at Higgins Industries.

10,000th Boat Ceremony, July 23, 1944. Courtesy of The National WWII Museum
Places of Invention

D-Day in New Orleans: July 1944

On July 22, 1944, Higgins Industries staged a reenactment of the landings on the beaches of Normandy that took place not even two months earlier.

Students during The National WWII Museum’s STEM Field Trip. Courtesy of The National WWII Museum
Places of Invention

A Stable of Geniuses: Ideas Win the War

The special STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) field trip for middle and high school students at The National WWII Museum focuses on science and technology of WWII.

Troops approaching Omaha Beach in an LCVP on June 6, 1944. National Archives Image.
Places of Invention

Brought to You from New Orleans: Jazz, Mardi Gras, and Amphibious Invasions

Jazz, Bourbon Street, and Mardi Gras are all well-known, recognizable symbols of the melting pot that is New Orleans. The National WWII Museum showcases another product of New Orleans—“Higgins boats.”

Stock image of insect repellent products on a store shelf.
Invention Stories

Buzz... Swat: Mosquito Repellents

It’s the time of year when mosquitos are hatching in preparation to swarm us, bite us, and make us itch.

WWII propaganda poster.
Invention Stories

Keep It Secret. Keep US Safe.

Espionage and sabotage were serious concerns for U.S. citizens during WWII. Poster campaigns promoted maintaining secrecy.

National Air and Space Museum curator Tom Crouch
Beyond Words

Podcast: Civil War Communications Technologies, Part 2 (of 2)

Jesse Heitz, King's College, London, describes the Confederacy’s use of ironclad ship technology and National Air and Space Museum curator Tom Crouch talks about prototypes for flying machines during the Civil War.

Patent model for tabletop portable printing press invented by JJ C Smith
Beyond Words

Podcast: Civil War Communications Technologies, Part 1 (of 2)

John Miller, Georgia Institute of Technology, discusses the differences between the Union and the Confederacy in their approaches to telegraph technology and Joan Boudreau, curator of Graphic Arts at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, highlights the role of tabletop portable printing presses.

A photo of Edgerton's lab at MIT
Places of Invention

MIT in World War II: A Hot Spot of Invention

Places of Invention tells the stories of historic and modern communities where people, resources, and spaces have come together to spark inventiveness.

Edgerton's aerial recon system.
Invention Stories

Seeing in the Dark: Aerial Reconnaissance in WWII

The General Electric Mazda FT-17 flash lamp was invented by Harold “Doc” Edgerton at MIT to take aerial reconnaissance photographs at night.

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