
TREYTON SCOTT
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Top 101 Black Inventors & African American’s Best Invention Ideas that Changed The World. This post lists the top 101 black inventors and African Americans’ best invention ideas that changed the world. Despite racial prejudice.
Stories (43)
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Moses Fleetwood Walker
Until Jackie Robinson joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 March 6, 2026 —Leavie scott Long before Jackie Robinson became a household name in 1947, another pioneering athlete stepped onto the field and challenged the deeply entrenched racial barriers of his era. His name was Moses Fleetwood “Fleet” Walker (1856–1924), and although history remembers him primarily as one of the earliest Black athletes to play in professional Major League Baseball, his extraordinary life story stretches far beyond the diamond.
By TREYTON SCOTTabout an hour ago in Chapters
Sarah Boone
Her design was patented in 1892 By Staff Reporter March 6, 2026 —Leavie Scott In the late 19th century, when American households were rapidly transforming under the weight of industrial growth and changing fashion, an inventor from Connecticut quietly reshaped one of the most common domestic tools in history: the ironing board. Her name was Sarah Boone (1847–1904), and her innovative design would become the blueprint for the ironing boards still used around the world today.
By TREYTON SCOTTabout an hour ago in Chapters
Story of Earl Shaw
Earl Shaw and his groundbreaking contributions to laser science. Earl Shaw was born in 1937, during a time when the world was teetering on the edge of tremendous technological transformation. From a young age, Shaw displayed an unusual fascination with the unseen forces of nature—light, magnetism, and the mysterious waves that seemed to govern the behavior of the physical world. He did not see science as a cold, rigid discipline. Instead, he viewed it as a living tapestry woven with curiosity, imagination, and endless possibility. This mindset would one day position him at the forefront of laser technology, leading to the invention of the spin-flip Raman tunable laser, a breakthrough that would quietly shape modern photonics.
By TREYTON SCOTTabout 24 hours ago in Chapters
Dox Thrash (1896–1965)
Dox Thrash and the invention of the carborundum printmaking process Dox Thrash was born in 1896 in the heart of rural Georgia, a place where creativity lived quietly in the corners of daily life. Long before he would become known for revolutionizing printmaking with the carborundum process, Thrash grew up surrounded by the textures and tones of the natural world—wood grain shimmering under sunlight, dusty roads blending into thick summer air, hand‑stitched quilts patterned with the stories of generations. These impressions would later fuel his artistic instincts, shaping a style that felt both grounded and luminous.
By TREYTON SCOTTabout 24 hours ago in Chapters
Edwin Roberts Russell
Edwin Roberts Russell: Edwin Roberts Russell In the shadows of one of the most consequential scientific efforts in human history stood a man whose name remains far less known than the magnitude of his contributions. Edwin Roberts Russell (1913–1996) was not a general, politician, or battlefield commander — yet his work would shape the outcome of World War II and alter the global landscape for generations.
By TREYTON SCOTT2 days ago in Chapters
James Parsons Jr
James Parsons Jr. (1900 -1989) – Iron alloy ORDER HERE In the vast and often overlooked world of industrial innovation, certain individuals shape the future not through fanfare or celebrity, but through the relentless pursuit of improvement. These are the inventors whose hands never rested, whose minds wove new possibilities from raw materials, transforming entire industries in the process. Among them stands James Parsons Jr. (1900–1989), a metallurgist and inventor whose work quietly laid important groundwork for the development of stainless steel—one of the most essential materials in modern technology, construction, and manufacturing.
By TREYTON SCOTT3 days ago in BookClub
Garrett Morgan
ORDER HERE In the long arc of American innovation, certain names blaze brightly across history, their ideas reshaping how entire societies operate. Yet among these extraordinary figures, few embodied creativity, courage, and practical foresight as completely as Garrett Augustus Morgan, an inventor whose work continues to influence daily life more than a century after he first began tinkering with his ideas. Known today for the gas mask precursor and the modern traffic signal, Morgan was much more than an inventor; he was a problem solver who possessed the rare ability to recognize trouble before it unfolded and build solutions that protected the public without fanfare or expectation.
By TREYTON SCOTT3 days ago in BookClub
Frederick McKinley Jones
Frederick McKinley Jones (1893 – 1961) The train that carried Frederick McKinley Jones back to Hallock, Minnesota, after World War I rattled like a pocketful of bolts. Through the window, winter wheat lay flat against the prairie, and the sky stretched in a pale sheet to the horizon. He had a duffel bag, a head full of machine music, and the kind of hands that remembered how things fit together long after memory had given up the words.
By TREYTON SCOTT7 days ago in BookClub











