Samuel R. Scottron: Difference between revisions
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His grandson, Charles Scottron, played for the Smart Set Athletic Club basketball team, one of the [[Black Fives]] teams, which were basketball leagues in the period between 1900 and 1940, when racial segregation was institutionalized, in which African-American players in New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago and Pittsburgh, and later other cities, engaged in community-based and inter-city leagues and rivalries. |
His grandson, Charles Scottron, played for the Smart Set Athletic Club basketball team, one of the [[Black Fives]] teams, which were basketball leagues in the period between 1900 and 1940, when racial segregation was institutionalized, in which African-American players in New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago and Pittsburgh, and later other cities, engaged in community-based and inter-city leagues and rivalries. |
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Scottron's daughter, actress Edna Louise Scottron, was the mother of noted singer [[Lena Horne]]. |
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=== Sources === |
=== Sources === |
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[http://dbs.ohiohistory.org/africanam/page.cfm?ID=15395] |
*[http://dbs.ohiohistory.org/africanam/page.cfm?ID=15395] |
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[http://uspto.gov] |
*[http://uspto.gov] |
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[http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/eagle/] |
*[http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/eagle/] |
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*[http://www.nndb.com/people/842/000024770/ NNDB listing for Lena Horne] |
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{{inventor-stub}} |
{{inventor-stub}} |
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[[Category:African Americans' rights activists|Scottron, Samuel R.]] |
[[Category:African Americans' rights activists|Scottron, Samuel R.]] |
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[[Category:Republican Party (United States)|Scottron, Samuel R.]] |
[[Category:Republican Party (United States)|Scottron, Samuel R.]] |
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[[Category:American inventors|Scottron, Samuel R.]] |
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[[Category:Year of death missing|Scottron, Samuel R.]] |
[[Category:Year of death missing|Scottron, Samuel R.]] |
Revision as of 20:56, 14 December 2006
Samuel Raymond Scottron was a prominent African-American inventor from Brooklyn, N.Y. who began his career as a barber. He was born in Philadelphia in 1841. He received his engineering degree from Cooper Union in 1878.
He was a community leader in New York, heading up organizations to promote racial harmony and fairness, as well as a public speaker and writer on race relations. He was a member of the Brooklyn board of education, and a leader in the Republican Party. He fought for freedom for slaves in Cuba and Puerto Rico.
He invented a special mirror bracket which allowed you to see your self as others see you. He went on to receive 4 more patents.
Here are his inventions and patent numbers.
- 1880-02-17, #224,732, Adjustable window cornice
- 1883-01-16, #270,851, Cornice
- 1886-09-21, #349,525, Pole tip
- 1892-08-30, #481,720, Curtain rod
- 1893-09-12, #505,008, Supporting bracket
His grandson, Charles Scottron, played for the Smart Set Athletic Club basketball team, one of the Black Fives teams, which were basketball leagues in the period between 1900 and 1940, when racial segregation was institutionalized, in which African-American players in New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago and Pittsburgh, and later other cities, engaged in community-based and inter-city leagues and rivalries.
Scottron's daughter, actress Edna Louise Scottron, was the mother of noted singer Lena Horne.