American Inventions and Inventors

audiobook

American Inventions and Inventors

by William A. (William Augustus) Mowry, Arthur May Mowry

EN·~7 hours·51 chapters

Chapters

51 total
1

American Inventions and Inventors

1:25
2

PREFACE.

1:44
3

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

2:07
4

CHAPTER I.

9:28
5

CHAPTER II.

10:49
6

CHAPTER III.

10:36
7

CHAPTER IV.

9:51
8

CHAPTER V.

11:10
9

CHAPTER VI.

10:22
10

CHAPTER VII.

10:44

Description

Step into the bustling workshop of America’s past, where each invention is told as a lively tale of curiosity and perseverance. This listener‑friendly guide follows a clear, chronological path, showing how early settlers turned basic needs for food, shelter, and clothing into groundbreaking ideas that reshaped daily life. Young ears will hear about humble beginnings—simple plows and candle‑making—leading to the daring experiments of inventors like Edison and Bell.

The book is richly illustrated, and the narration paints those pictures in vivid detail, from a colonial fireplace to the soaring arches of the Brooklyn Bridge. Along the way, listeners meet the people behind the breakthroughs, discovering how their inventions sparked new industries and altered the nation’s landscape. Designed for children aged ten to twelve, the story invites curiosity and pride, making history feel like an adventure rather than a lecture.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (420K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, Christian Boissonnas and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-11-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the authors

William A. (William Augustus) Mowry

William A. (William Augustus) Mowry

1829–1917

Best known as a lifelong educator, he wrote clear, practical history and civics books for students while helping shape school life in New England. His career joined classroom teaching, school leadership, and a steady stream of popular educational writing.

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AM

Arthur May Mowry

1862–1900

Best known for lively school histories and a close study of Rhode Island’s Dorr Rebellion, this teacher-writer helped turn big historical topics into books meant for students and general readers. His work often blended clear storytelling with a strong interest in American civic life.

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