world history industrial revolution

  • Automobile

    Automobile
    Created by: Nicolas joseph cugnot, France
    Nicolas joseph cugnot creating a number of inventions one of his inventions was called an automoblie. The engine in it was the first to employ high-pressure steam without condensation to the motor or fragile parts. The carriage was tricycle-mounted on the base of the vehicle with a single front wheel performing both steering and driving functions with feasibility and stability with steam-powered traction.
  • Steam engine

    Steam engine
    Created by James Watt, in France
    A cumbersome steam carriage for roads was built in France by Nicholas-Joseph Cugnot as early as 1769. But was mottified by James Watt, in France to go on railways. England was the first to use a steam carriage on a railway. The adaptation of the steam engine to railways became a success helping factories and for transportation.
  • camera

    camera
    Created by: nicephore Niepce, England
    The use of a lens in the opening of a wall or closed window shutter of a darkened room to project images used as a drawing aid has been traced back to circa 1550. Since the late 17th-century portable camera obscura devices in tents and boxes were used as a drawing aid. The first practical photographic process, which he named the daguerreotype and publicly reveild in 1839.
  • telephone

    telephone
    Created by: Alexander Graham and Elisha Gray, Canada
    During the 1870's, two well known inventors both independently designed devices that could transmit sound along electrical cables. The telegraph had been a highly successful communication system for about 30 years before experimenting the main problem with the telegraph was that it used Morse code.
  • electric light

    electric light
    Created by Thomas Edison, in Britain
    Thomos Edison created the electric light to help people in the dark when the sun went down. when it became night all people had to use were candels or fire places. Thomas Edison later than created land generators to power the lights in peoples homes. The generators were introduced later in 1882. Each generator weighed about 27 tons and had a 10-foot armature shaft and an output of 100 kilowatts.