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Thomas Edison

Thomas Edison was born on February 11, 1847, in Milan, Ohio, United States, and died on October 18, 1931, in West Orange, New Jersey. He was an American inventor and businessman, is considered the greatest inventor in the United States up to this day.

During his lifetime, Thomas Edison played a very important part in introducing the modern age of electricity. His name stands behind many items that changed our world, including the incandescent lamp, the first commercial electric light, the first power system, the electric railroad, important elements of motion-picture apparatus, the carbon-button transmitter for the telephone speaker, and many others.

During his 84 years of life, a acquired a number of as many as 1,093 patents. He was born with a condition that affected his hearing, and his problems started from a very early age. But he didn’t let his deafness affect his life. Instead, he was motivated by it and it really impacted his career and led to the creation of certain inventions.

He also built a large estate and his own research laboratory in West Orange, where he included facilities such as a library, a machine shop, and other buildings for metallurgy, chemistry, and woodworking.

Read also: 16 Science Mysteries Scientists Still Don’t Have An Answer For.

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