
If you are asked to name important inventors, you might start with Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell or Leonardo da Vinci.
You might not know their names, but they are just two of the female inventors behind everyday objects and scientific innovations. Here are nine inventions we wouldn’t have, if it weren’t for ground-breaking women.
1. Computer software – Grace Hopper
It wasn’t long before she was at the forefront of computer programming in the 1950s.
She was behind the compiler, which could translate instructions into code that computers can read, making programming quicker and ultimately revolutionising how computers worked.
Hopper also helped popularised the term “de-bugging” that we still use on computers programmes today, after a moth was removed from inside her machine.
“Amazing Grace”, as she was known, continued working with computers until she retired from the navy as its oldest serving officer, aged 79.
2. Caller ID and call waiting – Dr Shirley Ann Jackson
Her breakthroughs in telecommunications have also enabled others to invent the portable fax, fibre optic cables and solar cells.
She is the first African-American woman to gain a PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the first African-American woman to lead a top-ranked research university.
3. Windscreen wiper – Mary Anderson
Every time the window was open, the passengers in the car got colder.
Anderson started drawing her solution of a rubber blade that could be moved from inside the car, and in 1903 was awarded a patent for her device.
But the invention proved unsuccessful with car companies, who believed it would distract drivers.
Anderson never profited from her invention, even when the wipers later became standard on cars.
4. Space station batteries – Olga D Gonzalez-Sanabria
5. Dishwasher – Josephine Cochrane
Her machine, which involved a motor turning a wheel inside a copper boiler, was the first automatic dishwasher to use water pressure.
Cochrane’s alcoholic husband had left her with masses of debt after his death and this motivated her to patent her invention in 1886 and open her own production factory.
6. Home security system – Marie Van Brittan Brown
Together with her husband Albert, Van Brittan Brown developed the first home security system in response to the rising crime rates and slow police responses of the 1960s.
The device was complicated, with a camera powered by a motor which moved up and down the door to look through a peephole.
A monitor in her bedroom also came equipped with an alarm button.
7. Stem cell isolation – Ann Tsukamoto
Tsukamoto is currently conducting further research into stem cell growth and is the co-patentee on more than seven other inventions.
8. Kevlar – Stephanie Kwolek
Since her discovery in 1965, the material, which is five times stronger than steel, has saved lives and is used by millions every day.
It’s found in products ranging from household gloves and mobiles phones to aeroplanes and suspension bridges.
9. Monopoly – Elizabeth Magie
Magie wanted to demonstrate the problems with capitalism with an innovative game in which players traded fake money and property.
Her design, which she patented in 1904, was called The Landlord’s Game.
The game of Monopoly that we know today was published in 1935 by the Parker Brothers, who discovered that Darrow was not the sole creator and had, for just $500 (£385), bought Magie’s patent and, well, monopolised the game.

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