THE 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL INVENTORS OF ALL TIME

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7 The 100 Most Influential Inventors of All Time 7

written with a simple instrument, that met the needs of
the sightless. He later took this system, which consists of
a six-dot code in various combinations, and adapted it to
musical notation. He published a treatise on his type system
in 1829, and in 1837 he published a three-volume Braille
edition of a popular history schoolbook.
During the last years of his life Braille was ill with
tuberculosis. His system had been immediately accepted
and used by his fellow students, but wider acceptance was
slow in coming. The system was not officially adopted by
the school in Paris until 1854, two years after Braille’s
death. A universal Braille code for the English-speaking
world was not adopted until 1932, when representatives
from agencies for the blind in Great Britain and the United
States met in London and agreed upon a system known as
Standard English Braille, grade 2. In 1957 Anglo-American
experts again met in London to further improve the system.
A century after his death, Braille’s remains (minus his
hands, which were kept in his birthplace of Coupvray)
were moved to Paris for burial in the Panthéon.

Cyrus McCormick


(b. Feb. 15, 1809, Rockbridge county, Va., U.S.—d. May 13, 1884,
Chicago, Ill.)

C


yrus Hall McCormick, an American industrialist and
inventor, is generally credited with the development
(from 1831) of the mechanical reaper.
McCormick was the eldest son of Robert McCormick,
a farmer, blacksmith, and inventor. McCormick’s education,
in local schools, was limited. Reserved, determined, and
serious-minded, he spent all of his time in his father’s
workshop.
The elder McCormick had invented several practical
farm implements but, like other inventors in the United
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