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patented a submarine lamp and telescope for divers.
examined notes of her deceased husband for a military pyrotechnic night signal. Coston discovered how to make it work; designed and produced it; patented it in 1871.
Paper bag production. A cotton mill worker from age 9 through her late teens, Knight designed a machine that folded and glued paper to form the brown paper bags familiar today. She built a wooden model of the device, but needed a working iron model to apply for a patent. However, a man working in the machine shop where Knight's iron model was being built stole her design and patented the invention. Knight filed a successful patent interference lawsuit and was issued the patent in 1870. With a Massachusetts businessman, she established the Eastern Paper Bag Co. and received royalties. Knight received patents for several industrial machines, including a rotary engine. Her original machine (seen ab0ve) is in the Smithsonian Museum.
invented the popular baby-jumper. Patented in 1872.
invented a prize-winning flexible library desk for the Ladies Christian Association of Philadelphia. Folded, it was only 18 inches deep, 6 feet wide, 7 feet high. Unfolded to a depth of 7 feet with adjustable tiltable tables (with inkpots on stabilizing pivots), small closets, shelves, drawers, racks, 26 pigeon-holes, wastebasket, display space on top for busts and library ornaments.
The first woman inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, Elion is named on 45 patents, most notably for discoveries of medicines that fight leukemia, gout and herpes and a drug that suppresses the immune system, helping the body to accept transplanted tissue. She won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1988 for her work with colleague George Hitchings and researcher Sir James Black. (Above foto shows Elion receiving Nobel Prize from King of Sweden.)