By Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
Smithsonian National Museum of American History
nventive Minds: Inventing Green features the stories of historic and contemporary inventors whose work on socially-responsible technologies creates profound change for the common good.
Elephants in Danger
“An enormous number of elephants are destroyed . . . for the ivory of the tusks. . . . Long before our human story is over the elephant will be numbered with extinct species.” —The People’s Magazine, 1867
Ivory Billiard Ball (1800/1900) by Lemelson CenterLemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
Ivory was the preferred material for billiard balls in the 19th century and the search for substitutes, whether motivated by economics or ethics, informed the invention of early plastics.
- Ivory billiard ball, late 1800s.
Celluloid Billiard Ball (1868) by Lemelson Center and John Wesley HyattLemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
John Wesley Hyatt created a successful business making billiard balls with his invention of Celluloid in 1868.
- Celluloid billiard ball, 1868.
Bakelite Billiard Balls (1910) by Lemelson Center and Leo BaekelandLemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
Bakelite, announced by inventor Leo Baekeland in 1909, found many uses, from billiard balls and jewelry to electrical insulators.
- Bakelite billiard balls, after 1910.
Vitalite Billiard Balls (1935) by Lemelson Center and Max KoebnerLemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
Vitalite billiard balls, made of a cast resin originally invented in Germany in the 1930s by chemist Max Koebner, were popular during the 1930s–1950s.
- Vitalite billiard balls, about 1935.
Billiard ball polishing lathes (1920/1929) by Lemelson Center and Albany Billiard Ball Co.Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
Celluloid billiard ball manufacture, 1920s.
"The balls next go to the polishing lathes illustrated in photograph 75, where they are sanded and polished."
- From "Manufacture of Celluloid Billiard Balls," Albany Billiard Ball Co. Records.
Final polishing of billiard balls with wax (1920/1929) by Lemelson Center and Albany Billiard Ball Co.Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
"The manufacture of the celluloid balls is completed by a final polishing with wax in the polishing lathe."
- From "Manufacture of Celluloid Billiard Balls," Albany Billiard Ball Co. Records.
Inspecting freshly-manufactured billiard balls (1920/1929) by Lemelson Center and Albany Billiard Ball Co.Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
Celluloid billiard ball manufacture, 1920s.
- Albany Billiard Ball Co. Records.Celluloid billiard ball manufacture, 1920s
Billiard balls ground on a merry-go-round (1920/1929) by Lemelson Center and Albany Billiard Ball Co.Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
"After their final turning, the balls are ground in a merry-go-round illustrated in photograph 81."
- From "Manufacture of Celluloid Billiard Balls," Albany Billiard Ball Co. Records.
"The balls are ground by being made to roll in a race between oppositely revolving surfaces in contact with water and fine abrasive."
Buffing billiard balls on a buffing wheel (1920/1929) by Lemelson Center and Albany Billiard Ball Co.Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
"The manufacture of the synthetic balls is completed by buffing on a special buffing wheel, illustrated in photograph 84, where the final polishing is applied."
- From "Manufacture of Celluloid Billiard Balls," Albany Billiard Ball Co. Records.
Celluloid billiard ball manufacture (1920/1929) by Lemelson Center and Albany Billiard Ball Co.Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
Celluloid billiard ball manufacture, 1920s. Albany
- Billiard Ball Co. Records.
Endangered Species
Story by Joyce Bedi and Alison Oswald
of the
Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation
at the
National Museum of American History
Presentation by
Marc Bretzfelder
<a href="https://www.si.edu>Smithsonian Institution</a><br>Office of the Chief Information Officer</p>