THE 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL INVENTORS OF ALL TIME

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7 Sir Henry Bessemer 7

and vast profits flowed in. It became clear that “mild
steel”—as it was known to distinguish it from the hard
tool steels—could more clearly and reliably be used in
place of wrought iron for ship plate, girders, sheet, rods,
wire, rivets, and other items. The invention of the open-
hearth (Siemens-Martin) process in the late 1860s
eventually outstripped that of the Bessemer process. This
has now yielded place, in great measure, to oxygen steel-
making, which is a further development and refinement of
the Bessemer process.
In his later years—the process had not become a clear
success until he was nearing 70—Bessemer continued to
invent and make discoveries. The solar furnace he built
was more than a successful toy; he designed and built an
astronomical telescope for his own amusement; and he
developed a set of machines for polishing diamonds that
helped to reestablish that trade in London.
Apart from his knighthood, he received many honours,
such as the Fellowship of the Royal Society. Bessemer’s
An Autobiography (1905), with a concluding chapter by
his son, Henry Bessemer, is the only comprehensive
biography and the source of most material written about
him since.

Samuel Colt


(b. July 19, 1814, Hartford, Conn., U.S.—d. Jan. 10, 1862, Hartford)

S


amuel Colt was an American firearms manufacturer
who popularized the revolver.
Until the mid-1840s most pistols were single-shot
muzzle-loaders fired by wheel lock, flintlock, and percussion
ignition systems. Some early pistols, known as “pepper-
boxes,” had several barrels, and as early as the 17th century
pistols were manufactured with a revolving chamber to
load cartridges successively into a single barrel. However,
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