Inventors & Game-Changers
What do the traffic light, the home-security system, and laser eye surgery all have in common?
Why this month matters
Start here when you want pure wonder. Black Americans have been inventing the modern world the whole time — often without the credit. These are the gadgets, breakthroughs, and brilliant people behind things your child uses every day.
The story
Lewis Latimer made the lightbulb practical — his carbon filament let bulbs actually last — and he drew the plans for Alexander Graham Bell's telephone. Granville Woods, called "the Black Edison," held some 60 patents, including a system that let moving trains communicate and avoid crashes. Elijah McCoy's self-oiling engine worked so well that buyers asked for "the real McCoy." Garrett Morgan invented the three-position traffic signal and a smoke hood that firefighters used to save lives. Madam C.J. Walker built a hair-care empire and became one of America's first self-made female millionaires. Dr. Patricia Bath invented laser cataract surgery and restored sight to people who had been blind for decades. Mark Dean co-created the IBM personal computer and holds three of its nine original patents. From the operating room to the microchip, Black inventors are everywhere in your day.
The throughline
Next time you stop at a traffic light or flip a switch, remember whose mind made it work. Invention is part of this story — not the exception to it.