Stories of Great Inventors

Hattie E. Macomber
Great Inventors, by Hattie E.
Macomber

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Title: Stories of Great Inventors Fulton, Whitney, Morse, Cooper,
Edison
Author: Hattie E. Macomber
Release Date: October 13, 2006 [EBook #19533]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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Young Folk's Library of Choice Literature
STORIES OF
GREAT INVENTORS
FULTON WHITNEY MORSE COOPER EDISON
BY
HATTIE E. MACOMBER
EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY BOSTON NEW YORK
CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO

COPYRIGHTED By EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY
1897

CONTENTS.
PAGE Robert Fulton 7
Eli Whitney 41
Samuel Morse 79

Peter Cooper 121
Thomas A. Edison 147

[Illustration: FULTON.]

ROBERT FULTON.
This story is about a giant.
Do you believe in them?
He peeps out of your coffee cup in the morning.
He cheers you upon a cold day in winter.
But the boys and girls were not so well acquainted with him a hundred
years ago.
About that long ago, far to the north and east, a queer boy lived.
He sat in his grandmother's kitchen many an hour, watching the
tea-kettle.
He seemed to be idle.
But he was really very busy.
He was talking very earnestly to the giant.
The giant was a prisoner.
No one knew how to free him.
Many had often tried to do this and failed.

He was almost always invisible.
But when he did appear, it was in the form of a very old man.
This old man had long, white hair, and a beard which seemed to enwrap
him like a cloak--a cloak as white as snow.
So his name is The White Giant.
The boy's name was James Watt.
He lived in far-away Scotland.
He sat long, listening to the White Giant as he told him many
wonderful things.
The way in which the giant first showed himself to James was very
strange.
James noticed that the lid of the tea-kettle was acting very strangely.
It rose and fell, fluttered and danced.
Now, James had lived all his life among people who believed in
witches and fairies.
So he was watching for them.
And he thought there was somebody in the kettle trying to get out.
So he said, "Who are you and what do you want?"
"Space, freedom, and something to do," cried the giant.
"If you will only let me out, I'll work hard for you.
I'll draw your carriages and ships.
I'll lift all your weights.

I'll turn all the wheels of your factories.
I'll be your servant always, in a thousand other ways."
[Illustration: JOHN FITCH'S STEAMBOAT, 1788. By permission of
Providence & Stonington Steamship Co.]
If you have now guessed the common name of this giant, we will call
him Steam.
At the time James Watt lived, there were no steam boats, steam mills,
nor railways.
And this boy, though his grandmother scolded, thought much about the
giant in the tea-kettle.
And he became the inventor of the first steam engine that was of any
use to the world.
So, little by little, people came to know that steam is a great, good
giant.
They tried in many different ways to make him useful.
They wished very much to make him run a boat.
One man tried to run his boat in a queer way.
He made something like a duck's foot to push it through the water.
Another moved his boat by forcing a stream of water in at the bow and
out at the stern.
Then came a man named John Fitch.
He made his engine run a number of oars so as to paddle the boat
forward.
He grew very poor.

People laughed at him.
But he said, "When I shall be forgotten, steam boats will run up the
rivers and across the seas."
Then people laughed the harder and called him "a crank."
Mr. Fitch's boat was tried in 1787.
Now, in 1765,
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