People I
People II
100

Agricultural scientist:  He invented the "seed drill".

Jethro Tull

100

Religion:  He founded "The Salvation Army".

William Booth

200

Agricultural scientist:  He developed the idea of "crop rotation" to keep fields fertile.

Charles Townsend

200

Religion:  He founded the "Sunday School Movement" in Great Britian.

Robert Raikes

300

Agricultural scientist:  He did work on "selective breeding" to develop better farm animals.

Robert Bakewell

300

Religion:  He was the founder of the YMCA.

George Williams

400

Mechanics:  He invented the "cotton gin" to separate seeds from cotton fiber to improve the cotton industry.

Eli Whitney

400

Religion:  Evangelist.  He was known as "The Prince of Preachers".

Charles H. Spurgeon

500

Inventor:  He invented the "steam engine".

James Watt

500

Writer/Theorist:  He wrote "The Origin of Species" which stated that Man evolved from a lower species.

Charles Darwin

600

He created the first successful "steamboat" using the steam engine.

Robert Fulton

600

Scientist:  He created the "Periodic Table" for element classification.

Dmitri Mendeleev

700

Inventor (Agriculture):  He invented to first "mechanical reaper" to help harvest wheat.

Cyrus McCormick

700

Scientist:  He discovered X-Rays.

William Roentgen

800

Inventor:  He invented the "telegraph" and the code that bears his name.

Samuel Morse

800

This husband and wife team discovered radioactive elements in pitchblend.

Pierre and Marie Curie

900

Inventor:  He invented a process to "vulcanize rubber" to make it more useful.

Charles Goodyear

900

He was considered the greatest scientific thinker of the 20th century.  He developed the "Theory of Relativity".

Albert Einstein

1000

Inventor:  He invented an inexpensive way to make "steel" so it could be used in the construction industry.

Henry Bessemer

1000

Literature:  His writings include "A Christmas Carol", and "Hard Times".  He drew attention to the conditions of the poor in England at the time.

Charles Dickens

1100

Inventor:  He invented the "incandescent lightbulb and the phonograph" as well as many other inventions to help mankind.

Thomas Edison

1100

Writer:  He wrote about conditions in Russia during the Napoleonic Wars.  His masterpiece is called "War and Peace".

Leo Tolstoy

1200

Economist:  He wrote the book, "The Wealth of Nations" which advocated free trade, and defined a nation by the amount of its productivity.

Adam Smith

1200

American Writer and Humorist:  His most famous works are "Tom Sawyer" and "Huckleberry Finn".

Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain).

1300

Writer/Revolutionary:  He and Freidrich Engels wrote "The Communist Manifest".  He later wrote "Das Kapital" books that advocated economic revolution to remove power from the upper and middle classes.

He also said that religion is "the opiate of the people".

Karl Marx

1300

Painter:  "Impressionist" from France

Claude Monet

1400

Inventor:  He helped crate better roads.

John McAdams

1400

Art:  One of the foremost "expressionists" in painting.  His most famous work hangs in my room, "The Starry Night".

Vincent van Gogh

1500

Sculptor:  One of the foremost French impressionist sculptors of the 19th Century.  His most famous work is called "The Thinker".

Rodin

1500

Musician:  He composed "impressionist" music.

Claude DeBussy