Nov. 30: It’s St. Andrew’s Day, the national day of Scotland. So we offer a toast to the great inventors who have applied Scottish ingenuity to their work over the years, helping craft the modern world in the process.
Some, like Alexander Graham
Nov. 30: It’s St. Andrew’s Day, the national day of Scotland. So we offer a toast to the great inventors who have applied Scottish ingenuity to their work over the years, helping craft the modern world in the process.
Some, like Alexander Graham
Others, like Arthur James Arnot — a Scot who moved to Australia, where he patented the electric drill — are less so.
In the wake of the Scottish Enlightenment, an 18th-century period during which the country achieved great intellectual and scientific accomplishments, emigrants such as Arnot spread what writer Arthur Herman calls the “Scottish mentality” well beyond the United Kingdom.
“When we gaze out on a contemporary world shaped by technology, capitalism and modern democracy, and struggle to find our own place in it, we are in effect viewing the world through the same lens as the Scots did,” writes Herman in his 2001 book, How the Scots Invented the Modern World.
Here are some of the great Scottish inventors who helped change the world:
Quite a list, eh, laddie?
One final note: The issue of who, exactly, invented whisky — the Scots or their neighbors, the Irish — remains a highly debatable subject (especially in British pubs).
At a recent San Francisco tasting of The Macallan, whisky ambassador Eden Algie attempted to put the touchy subject to rest with a distinctly Scottish take on the flap.
The Irish invented whisky, he said — but the Scots perfected it. Slainte!
Source: How the Scots Invented the Modern World, Wikipedia
Image: Alexander Graham Bell circa 1914–1919. Via Wikipedia.
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Authors: Lewis Wallace