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zombola
01-13-2015, 02:41 PM
Kids can be very creative and sometimes can even think of brilliant ideas. Anyone who has a child probably knows how amazing they can be…yes, sure they have no filter on their thoughts and it’s incredibly annoying sometimes, but their imagination has no limits! That’s why you should encourage your kid to keep dreaming…because their dream can come true! If you’ve ever jumped on a trampoline or ate a Popsicle you should thank these 9 kids that made it possible! Here are 9 children that turned their dream into reality….
1. Television – Philo Farnsworth (Age 14)
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Did you know that our TV was invented by a 14-year-old? Farnsworth developed a television system complete with receiver and camera, which he produced commercially in the firm of the Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation, from 1938 to 1951.



2. Popsicle – Frank Epperson (Age 11)
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In 1905, Frank Epperson left his glass filled with soda water powder and water outside on the porch by accident with the mixing stick still in it. It was cold so the beverage froze overnight. That’s how the young inventor got inspiration.



3. Toy Truck – Robert Patch (Age 6)
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When Robert Patch created a convertible toy truck, he was only 6-year-old child. It happened back in 1963, when the small kid looked for something to play with…so he decided to build a small truck model and use it as a toy… He planned it so it could easily be taken apart and put back together and so it could be transformed into all sorts of different vehicles. After he finished to draw his model, he got a patent for his idea.



4. Trampoline – George Nissen (Age 16)
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George Nissen was only 16-year-old when he stared to develop his idea for a device for a bouncing apparatus to train on. In 1937 he came across the Spanish word “trampolin”, which means “diving board”, add an “e” to the end and trademarked the name for what was to become kid’s favorite activity.



Wristies – K-K Gregory (Age 10)
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On a cold and snowy winter’s day, kk Gregory, a 10-year-old, was playing outside. Suddenly, her wrists started to hurt because they were cold. Then, decided to develop the Wristies and her wrists never hurt again.



6. Snow Mobile – Joseph-Armand Bombardier (Age 15)
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In 1922, Joseph-Armand, a 15-year-old decided to attach his dad’s old Ford Model T motor to a sled to see if the machine could power through the snow, and it did! That’s how the first Snow Mobile was born

zombola
01-15-2015, 01:42 PM
Braille – Louis Braille (Age 15)
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Louis Braille was blinded by an accident when he was only 3-year-old. When he was a 15-year-old student, inspired by the military cryptography, Braille created a new method built specifically for the needs of the blind


Ear Muffs – Chester Greenwood (Age 15)
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Chester Greenwood, a 15-year-old became so annoyed with the cold outside that made his ears freeze, he asked his grandmother to sew fur onto a two-loop wire he created. After a while he got a patent on his creative product. The state of Maine celebrates his invention every December 21 at the “Chester Greenwood Day.”


Flat-bottom paper bag – Margaret Knight (age 13)
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When Margaret Knight was 13-year-old, she was working in a paper bag factory when she realized that that paper bags would be easier to use if they were folded differently. She developed a new design with a flat bottom fold that allwed paper bags to stand up. And that is how, in 1838, the Flat-bottom paper bag was born.