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steam engine
the steam engine was made by James Watt and was made in and was Steam power became the energy sourceMerthyr Tydfil in South Walesr many machines and vehicles, making it cheaper and easier to produce commodities in large amounts. This in turn increased the demand for raw materials used to build more machines that can produce even more commodities. -
fire extinguisher
Ambrose Godfrey was born in Germany 1660 he moved to England where he invented the first fire extinguisher.Godfrey was a chemist and developed a cash of liquid designed to extinguish fires which contained a pewter chamber of gunpowder. A system of fuses would light up, exploding the gunpowder and scattering the solution around the fire. -
spinning jenny
The spinning jenny is a multi-spindle spinning frame, and was one of the key developments in the industrialisation of textile manufacturing during the early Industrial Revolution. It was invented in 1764–1765 by James Hargreaves in Stan hill, Oswaldtwistle, Lancashire in England. -
water frame
the water frame was made by Richard Arkwright in Cromford, Derbyshire 1771 and it was used t the machine could spin large quantities of cotton yarn. Its operation relied on a supply of raw cotton grown by enslaved people -
cotton gin
cotton gin, machine for cleaning cotton of its seeds invented in the United States by Eli Whitney in 1793. -
power loom
The Power Loom was invented by Edmund Cartwright in 1785. It used water power to speed up the weaving process. -
steam train
the steam train was made by Richard Trevithick in Merthyr Tydfil.it was the first steam locomotive to haul passengers on a public railway the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825. -
sewing machine
the sewing machine was made by Barthélemy Thimonnier and was made in France.it was meant to be used on leather and canvas material. -
telegraph
the telegraph was made by André-Marie Ampère in Hammersmith Mall.It was the first electrical telecommunications system and the most widely used of a number of early messaging systems called telegraphs, that were devised to send text messages more quickly than physically carrying them. -
steel plow
it was by John Deere was a blacksmith who developed the first commercially successful, self-scouring steel plow in 1837 and founded the company that still bears his name. it was used to cutting and turning the prairie soil. -
phonograph
the first phonograph was made by Charles Cros and was used to transcribe messages from the telegraph to a piece of paper tape. -
the light bulb
According to the Thomas Edison National Historical Park, “In 1879, he made an incandescent bulb that burned long enough to be practical, long enough to light a home for many hours