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In the early 1900s, two African-American women inventors with both science and business acumen—Madam C.J. Walker and Annie Turnbo Malone—developed products that made them fortunes.
American Inventors You've Never Heard Of May 20, 2018 7:17 AM update May 20, 2018 8:03 AM By Julie Taboh; Inductee Stan Honey adds his name plaque to the Gallery of Icons (Photo by Jay Premack/USPTO) ...
America has long been the land of innovation. More than 13,000 years ago, the Clovis people created what many call the “first American invention” — a stone tool used primarily to hunt large ...
America has long been the land of innovation. More than 13,000 years ago, the Clovis people created what many call the “first American invention” – a stone tool used primarily to hunt large ...
Sarah Elisabeth Goode made history in 1885 when she became one of the first Black American women to earn a patent. She ...
American Inventor Local "American Inventor" products hit the market this summer. While thousands of hopeful inventors vie to gain national exposure on season two of ABC's "American Inventor," two ...
This deliberate early exclusion of Black inventors from the patent system and, in large part, the pantheon of great American inventors, was rooted in racist assumptions about the intellectual ...
In the name of globalism, Washington has weakened U.S. patent law and undermined the ability of American inventors to defend their intellectual property from theft.
“Patent protection for a lot of African American inventors was rather difficult to achieve,” said Rebekah Oakes, acting historian with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, located in ...
Two weeks ago, I went down to the San Francisco auditions for American Inventors with Sarah Meyers of team partycrash fame, where we were not so warmly greeted by the staff there. I understand ...