There is a little overlap on this list with our
previous list “Top 10 Scientists Killed Or Injured By Their Experiments”
– but there are sufficiently new people here to make this a definite
must-have list for the site. In the pursuit of greater knowledge, there
is risk to life and limb. The people on this list took the risk and died
– but not before making progress for all man. Here are 10 great
inventors who died (in a round-about way) at their own hands.
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Henry Winstanley
Henry Winstanley was the a famous English lighthouse architect and
engineer who constructed the first Eddystone lighthouse. Winstanley
wished to test the lighthouse’s strength and so demanded to be inside it
during a storm. The lighthouse collapsed, killing Winstanley and five
other people. |
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Alexander Bogdanov
Alexander Bogdanov was a noted Russian physician, philosopher,
economist, science fiction writer, and revolutionary. One of his many
scientific experiments involved ideas of possible rejuvenation through
blood transfusion. Having given blood transfusions to many notable
people, including Lenin’s sister, Bogdanov decided to give himself a
transfusion of blood from one of his patients who suffered from malaria
and tuberculosis. He died from the infections shortly after. |
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Cowper Phipps Coles
Cowper Phipps Coles was a distinguished Royal Navy Captain who invented
a rotating turret for ships during the Crimean War. After the war, Coles
patented his invention and set about building his own ship using this
revolutionary design, having seen it adapted for other Royal Navy ships.
His ship, the HMS Captain, required several unusual and dangerous
modifications however, including a so called “hurricane deck” which
raised the ship’s centre of gravity. On the 6th September 1870, the HMS
Captain capsized, killing Coles and most of its 500 person crew. |
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Karel Soucek
Karel Soucek was a Canadian stuntman famous for inventing a “capsule”
(really just a modified barrel) and riding down the Niagara Falls in it.
He survived, although suffered some injuries. In 1985, he convinced a
company to finance a barrel drop from the top of the Houston Astrodome
in Texas. A special waterfall was created from the top of the 180 ft
structure, with a plunge pit at the bottom. However, the stunt went
wrong, and Soucek hit the rim of the pool instead of the centre, causing
the capsule to splinter and severely injure him. He died the next day.
Evel Knievel called it the most dangerous stunt he had ever seen. His
capsule is on display at the New York State Museum. |
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Franz Reichelt
Franz Reichelt was an Austrian tailor who was famous for creating a
strange overcoat/parachute hybrid that he claimed could sail its wearer
gently to the ground or even to fly. He conducted his experiment from
the first deck of the Eiffel Tower, and in front of a group of
spectators and a camera crew, proceeded to fall straight down. He died
immediately from the impact.
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Otto Lilienthal
Otto Lilienthal was a pioneer of human aviation who became known as the
Glider King. He was the first person to make repeated successful gliding
flights. Newspapers and magazines in many countries published
photographs of Lilienthal gliding, favorably influencing public and
scientific opinion about the possibility of flying machines becoming
practical reality after ages of idle fantasy and unscientific tinkering.
On a flight on the 9th August 1896, Lilienthal fell 17 meters, breaking
his spine. He died the next day. His final words were, “Small sacrifices
must be made!”
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William Bullock
William Bullock was an American inventor whose 1863 invention of the
rotary printing press helped revolutionize the printing industry due to
its great speed and efficiency. Bullock died while trying to repair one
of his printing presses, by getting his foot crushed under one of the
machines while trying to kick a pulley into place. His foot later became
gangrenous, and Bullock died during an operation to amputate his foot.
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J. G. Parry-Thomas
John Godfrey Parry-Thomas was a Welsh motor-racing driver and engineer.
He had always dreamed of breaking the land speed record set by Malcolm
Campbell, and set about creating a car to do it. He developed a car,
named Babs, which had many modifications, such as an exposed chains
connecting the wheels to the engines. On the 27th of April 1926,
Parry-Thomas broke the existing record, before raising it to above 170
mph the next day. The record stood for a year, before Malcolm Campbell
broke it in 1927. On trying to reclaim his record, one of the chains
snapped and flew into his neck, partially decapitating him. He died
instantly.
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Thomas Midgley Jr
Thomas Midgley was an American chemist who invented both leaded petrol
and CFCs. Though lauded during his time, he has come to be known as
having “had more impact on the atmosphere than any other single organism
in Earth history” and “the one human responsible for more deaths than
any other in history” due to his inventions. He eventually contracted
Polio and lead poisoning and was left disabled in his bed. This caused
him to create an elaborate system of pulleys and ropes in order to lift
himself from bed. He died at the age of 55 after being strangled by one
of his pulleys and is notable for the fact that both his inventions,
leaded petrol and his pulley operated bed, contributed to his death.
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Marie Curie
Marie Curie was a French-Polish physicist and chemist who is famous for
discovering a host of new elements, including radium and polonium, as
well as the theory of radioactivity and the isolation of radioactive
isotopes. She was the joint winner of the Nobel Prize in 1903 (along
with her husband Pierre). She died on July 4, 1934, from aplastic
anaemia, almost certainly contracted from exposure to radiation. The
damaging effects of ionizing radiation were then not yet known, and much
of her work had been carried out in a shed without any safety measures.
She had carried test tubes containing radioactive isotopes in her pocket
and stored them in her desk drawer, remarking on the pretty blue-green
light that the substances gave off in the dark.
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