In the 19th and 20th centuries, minds blossomed. The field of engineering was at a peak, with inventions emerging to modernize and better the lifestyles of people worldwide. Dunn and Wind made it possible for farmers to receive electrical power, using windmills to generate power for farms in U.S plain and rural regions. The windmills were also used to generate power for lights, radios, refrigerators, freezers, washing machines and more. These items are still used in today’s generation. Lewis Latimer, one may refer to him as a modern Thomas Edison, improved filaments in light bulbs. Marjorie Stewart Joyner, a beautician made it possible to curl African American women’s hair at one time. Her invention lowered the time she spent on each individual head and increased the number of customer in her salon. The 19th and 20th centuries made hard laborious task less time consuming and more accessible to all.
In the early beginnings of the 19th century, major cities had easy access to new labor-saving devices powered by electricity. Private electrical power companies provided electricity to only major populated cities, leaving citizens such as farms in rural areas without access. Dunn and Wind thought of ways to achieve electrical power to the outcastes. Dunn and Wind used 1 to 3 kilowatts to drive power onto rural lands in the U.S. This made it possible for farmers to have easy access to new-labor saving devices. Farmers were able to make more products faster
Thomas Edison and Lewis Latimer invented the light bulb, however, Lewis Latimer by improved the filaments inside the bulbs. Lewis Latimer was Africna -American and a runaway fugitive. He became a draftsmen of incandecentlight bulbs and the founder of an electrical company in New York. His work ws not only beneficial but hisotrically rewarding and an empowerment for other African -Americans. During this era, it seemed unheard of, for a black person to perform such intellectual and complex task. Lewis Latimer was one of the many African-Americans to prove socitey wrong. Like many other black inventors, Latimer improved the light bulb as well as the racial mindsets of American society.
Marjorie Stewart Joyner, an african-american woman and a professional beautician. Later on, down her career path she was able to add another achievement onto her resume, as an inventor. Her invention, the set-curl, was remarkable to many black woman. “The iron’s larger curl relaxed tightly curled hair. But only one fire-heated iron could be used at a time. Joyner disliked the slow and uncomfortable process.” Black woman who spent up to 6 hours on their hair were able to cut that time in half, even in a salon. Three hours on doing hair is still a long time but less tedious. Joyner used a 16 pencil- shaped pot roast rods and a hairdryer hood. Her invention made it so that woman could roll their hair and just sit under a blowdryer with a hood. Black woman to use this technique today. This made it easier to curl the whole head without using a curling iron.