Robert Fulton (1807)'s ClermontThe first successful steamboat. Like the locomotive, made trade so, so much better. For example, now the US could leverage its advantage in having the Mississippi river.
William Murdock's cool thing he did (1792)Lit his home using coal gas. Also, he was James Watt's assistant.
Charles Babbage (1834)'s analytic engineFirst ancestor of the computer
Michael Faraday (1831)'s discovery of electromagnetic currentsMade generators and electrical engines possible
Samuel F. B. Morse's telegraph and Morse Code (1837)
Henry Bessemir's steel converter (1854)
First transatlantic cable completed1858
Gugliemo Marconi (1896)'s wireless telegraph patentUseful for, like, ship distress calls. Say, for example, the one the Titanic sent out.
Large suspension bridge, "triumph of engineering."
More efficient thread spinning
Thomas Alva Edison's phonograph (1877)This is a record player. Useful for music, instructions, etc.,
James Hargreaves (1765)'s spinning jenny
Eli Whitney (1793)'s cotton gin
Boost!
Boost!
John Kay (1733)'s flying shuttleTremendously helped with making weaving easier, used in the putting-out industry at first.
Alexander Graham Bell's telephone (1876)Made communicating across long distances much easier, but such conversations still had to be done in public, etc.,
From Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
Invented the incandescent lamp. Though he was, in general, prone to rude tendencies.
1858
Allowed for barges to carry coal from Worsely to Manchester
First skyscraper (10 stories tall) (in Chicago)
James Watt's efficient steam engine (1765)
First commercially successful (though kind of clumsy) steam engine, used to pump water out of coal mines. Big deal, since we've just unlocked a new power source.
Allowed for more sewing, including at-home
First occurred in 1850. Gasoline is an important fuel source.
Boost!
Boost!
Daguerre's daguerrotype (1838)Early form of photography
Mass slaughter is now possible, begins mechanization of warfare. Unfortunately, as some predicted, his machine gun did not prevent war — people still fought, despite these monsters being on the battlefield.
Cartwright's power loom (1787)
cars go vroom
Alfred Nobel's dynamite (1867)
Frozen!
Frozen!
Thomas Edison (1879)
Eiffel Tower (1889)
Thomas Newcomen (1712)'s steam engine
James Watt's efficient steam engine (1765)
Early form of photography
Robert Trevithick (1801)'s steam locomotive demonstration
Large suspension bridge, "triumph of engineering."
James Hargreaves (1765)'s spinning jennyAutomated thread spinning
Made generators and electrical engines possible
Allowed for barges to carry coal from Worsely to Manchester
Marc Brunel's first underwater tunnel (1826-1842)Under the Thames
William Murdock's cool thing he did (1792)Lit his home using coal gas. Also, he was James Watt's assistant.
Richard Arkwright's water frame (1769)More efficient thread spinning
Joseph Monier (1849)Reinforced Concrete
According to wikipedia:
Henry Bessemir's steel converter (1854)
Tremendously helped with making weaving easier, used in the putting-out industry at first.
Crompton's "mule" + Spinning jenny and water frame fully automated weaving process. Yeah.
Gugliemo Marconi (1901) transatlantic radio messageFrom Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
First occurred in 1850. Gasoline is an important fuel source.
Eli Whitney (1793)'s cotton gin
Cathode rays discovered
Mass slaughter is now possible, begins mechanization of warfare. Unfortunately, as some predicted, his machine gun did not prevent war — people still fought, despite these monsters being on the battlefield.