On 13 May 1857, Ronald Ross was born, who became the first Briton to become a Nobelist. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1902 for his work on malaria, about which he made a significant discovery concerning its mode of transmission.
In 1899, he published a pamphlet titled Instructions For the Prevention of Malarial Fever For the Use of Residents of Malarious Places. This forms an excellent short article for readers of the Feature for Today to enjoy “in his own words.”
On 13 May 1884, Cyrus Hall McCormick died. His father had been unsuccessful, after years of trying, to produce a successful machine for a certain task. Cyrus some years later was successful in that goal, and in 1843 participated in a widely publicized competition against a rival. By winning he had a healthy promotional start for his manufacturing business for that machine, and he remains recognized for developing its first commercially successful design. (Which machine was that? Well it’s the question in the quiz below.)
Today's book pick is: Cyrus Hall McCormick: His Life and Work (Business Biographies), by Herbert N. Casson. McCormick lived in that heroic period of industrial advancement, when great things were done by great individuals. Chances are, his name is familiar to you, and you found it easy to name his invention in the quiz below. In which case you know how important and revolutionary it was. And yet, he was a decent man that contrasts with the behavior of many of the other industrial barons of his era. That aspect of his life may be unfamiliar to you, and that is a good reason to look more extensively into this great man’s biography!
It is available from Amazon, typically about New from $34.95. Used from $36.31. (As of earlier time of writing - subject to change.)
The observer listens to nature: the experimenter questions and forces her to reveal herself. | |
I, however, believe that for the ripening of experience the light of an intelligent theory is required. People are amused by the witticism that the man with a theory forces from nature that answer to his question which he wishes to have but nature never answers unless she is questioned, or to speak more accurately, she is always talking to us and with a thousand tongues but we only catch the answer to our own question. | |
The Panama Canal was dug with a microscope. | |
The sciences are like a beautiful river, of which the course is easy to follow, when it has acquired a certain regularity; but if one wants to go back to the source, one will find it nowhere, because it is everywhere; it is spread so much [as to be] over all the surface of the earth; it is the same if one wants to go back to the origin of the sciences, one will find only obscurity, vague ideas, vicious circles; and one loses oneself in the primitive ideas. |
Before you look at today's web page, see if you can answer some of these questions about the events that happened on this day. Some of the names are very familiar. Others will likely stump you. Tickle your curiosity with these questions, then check your answers on today's web page. | |
Births | |
| Sir Ronald Ross, born 13 May 1857 was a British bacteriologist who received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his work on malaria. What did Ronald Ross find about the way in which malaria is transmitted? |
Deaths | |
| Cyrus Hall McCormick, an American industrialist and inventor (1809-1884) is generally credited with the development of the first commercially successful design for a certain type of machine. To establish its functionality, he participated in a widely publicized competition with a rival, which he won. This launched his manufacturing business. What was his important invention? |
| An American scientist (1797-1878) was one of the first great ones after Benjamin Franklin. He was also the first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. But it was his discovery of self-inductance for which he is most remembered and his name is now used for the SI the unit of inductance. What is the name of this scientist? |
Events | |
| In 1958, the trademark name for a certain new type of fastener was registered in the U.S. The inventor was inspired by burrs sticking to his clothes. What is the trademark name of this fastener? |
| In 1913, Igor Sikorsky of Russia built and was the first to fly an airplane with a certain number of engines. How many engines were on Sikorsky’s airplane that was the first of its type, flown in 1913? |
| In 1637, Cardinal Richelieu in France created a replacement for the dagger, in at least this civilized use. He had the point rounded off. What was the use for his new design? |
Fast answers for the previous newsletter for May 12: The decade including the year 1964 • Justus Liebig • polytetrafluoroethylene, Teflon • Dvorak keyboard • eagle.
Your click on a Facebook, StumbleUpon, or other social button on the site webpages is also a welcome sign of appreciation. Thank you for using them.
© This newsletter is copyright 2020 by todayinsci.com. Please respect the Webmaster's wishes and do not put copies online of the Newsletter — or any Today in Science History webpage. (If you already have done so, please remove them. Thank you.) Offline use in education is encouraged such as a printout on a bulletin board, or projected for classroom viewing. Online, descriptive links to our pages are welcomed, as these will provide a reader with the most recent revisions, additions and/or corrections of a webpage. For any other copyright questions, please contact the Webmaster by using your mail reader Reply button.
--
If you do not want to receive any more newsletters, Unsubscribe
To update your preferences and to unsubscribe visit this link
Executive Real Estate Business Class
-
Carolyn Bryant, who is now in her 80s, has never faced any consequences for her actions. ...
-
Meet The Man Behind Japan's Most Gruesome Human Experiments During W...
-
55 Creepy Photos From The Darkest Recesses Of Human History From the Fre...
About the publisher
Search This Blog
Blog Archive
-
▼
2020
(1542)
-
▼
May
(194)
- FAMILY: Building kindness in a tough time
- What is history's biggest mystery?
- On This Day for May 31 - Adolf Eichmann hanged, Cl...
- Globalist Race War? because COVID Coup exposed? ...
- Newsletter for Sunday 31 May.
- May 31: Battle of Jutland, Earthquakes and the Clo...
- BREAKING NEWS: SpaceX launches new era of spacefli...
- The Compass: Spain
- On This Day for May 30 - Joan of Arc burned at the...
- Newsletter for Saturday 30 May.
- CORONAVIRUS SPECIAL EDITION: The best way to clean...
- May 30: Voltaire the Rebel
- This Week's Roundup Top Ten from History News Network
- On This Day for May 29 - Mount Everest summit reac...
- Newsletter for Friday 29 May.
- You & your loved ones can be Involuntarily Quarant...
- YOUR WEEKLY ESCAPE: The famous Viking warrior who ...
- May 29: Return of Charles II, Mt. Everest Knocked ...
- Alone Returns With a $1,000,000 Prize
- On This Day for May 28 - Amnesty International fou...
- The secular utilitarian U.N. New World Order has a...
- Newsletter for Thursday 28 May.
- May 28: Spanish Armada Sets Sail, The Indian Remov...
- SCIENCE: Restoring an American frontier
- Breaking News from History News Network
- On This Day for May 27 - Founding of St. Petersbur...
- Christian History Magazine: Covid-19 Response
- Newsletter for Wednesday 27 May.
- Learn whose pulling the strings what the media ha...
- May 27: Habeaus Corpus, Priam's Treasure and Dunkirk
- TRAVEL: Find the secrets to your backyard
- Journey with Ancient Explorers when you subscribe ...
- On This Day for May 26 - Martin Luther declared a ...
- Newsletter for Tuesday 26 May.
- May 26: Start of the Dow Jones Index, Middle Easte...
- HISTORY: The tumultuous past of the U.S. Postal Se...
- A Memorial Day Offer from Britannica!
- Grant Premieres Tonight!
- New This Week On History News Network
- On This Day for May 25 - U.S. Constitutional Conve...
- Economic Re-Opening is a Fakeout + CDC numbers rev...
- Newsletter for Monday 25 May.
- May 25: On This Day in History
- FAMILY: Moving past a big disappointment
- The real history behind WW2 film 'Greyhound' | Ann...
- On This Day for May 24 - Opening of the Brooklyn B...
- Newsletter for Sunday 24 May.
- Vaccine: 20 percent Serious Injury after skipping ...
- May 24: Methodism, Morse Code and the Bridge that ...
- The Compass: Argentina
- Your New Favorite Podcast
- On This Day for May 23 - Tibet annexed by China, C...
- Watch all the talks from BBC History Magazine's Me...
- Newsletter for Saturday 23 May.
- Dolores Cahill PhD expert in molecular genetics an...
- CORONAVIRUS SPECIAL EDITION: There's a reason so m...
- May 23: The Crazy Trigger for the Thirty Years War
- PHOTOGRAPHY: Capturing 59 years of human spaceflight
- How Booze, Drugs, And A Woman Named June Destroyed...
- A Memorial Day Sale for Everyone!
- The Roundup Top Ten from History News Network
- On This Day for May 22 - Roman Emperor Constantine...
- Newsletter for Friday 22 May.
- YOUR WEEKLY ESCAPE: What do the world's happiest p...
- May 22: The World's 1st Atlas is Published and WWI...
- ANIMALS: Saving the pangolin
- On This Day for May 21 - First nonstop solo transa...
- May 21: The 1st Transatlantic Flights and some Mem...
- Ron Panzer interview will air on Friday on Trunew...
- Grant: Watch the Extended Opening Scene
- SCIENCE: Food supply challenges prompt creativity
- Breaking News from History News Network
- On This Day for May 20 - U.S. Homestead Act signed...
- Newsletter for Wednesday 20 May.
- Ron Panzer interview: Trunews.com Today at 3 pm E...
- May 20: Vasco da Gama, Shakespeare and My Fair Lady
- TRAVEL: The promise of happiness, even now
- Inspire Their Curiosity w/ Nat Geo Kids Magazine
- On This Day for May 19 - Ringling Bros. Circus for...
- When we learn what the vaccine will do to everyone...
- Newsletter for Tuesday 19 May.
- May 19: On This Day in History
- See The Most Accurate Map In The World
- HISTORY: At 110 years old, he made our cover
- New This Week on History News Network
- On This Day for May 18 - Eruption of Mount St. Hel...
- Newsletter for Monday 18 May.
- May 18: On This Day in History
- FAMILY: Helping your kids after their troubling dr...
- What did Queen Victoria really look like? | Mediev...
- On This Day for May 17 - School segregation outlaw...
- Newsletter for Sunday 17 May.
- Cardiologist states Hydroxychloroquine side-effect...
- May 17: NYSE Forms and the Watergate Hearings Begin
- The Compass: California
- On This Day for May 16 - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising su...
- Newsletter for Saturday 16 May.
- May 16: Dambusters and Stem Cells
- CORONAVIRUS SPECIAL EDITION: This map shows where ...
- The dream to photograph 10,000 vulnerable animal s...
-
▼
May
(194)
-
Blogroll
-
About
HistoryFact
0 comments:
Post a Comment