Eli Whitney is also invented the idea of changeable parts, for example, after inventing the Cotton Gin, Eli Whitney had obtained a government contract to make 10,000 muskets in two years. This was a very short amount of time, because you had to make a musket one at a time. At the end of two years, he did not even make one, and when he was brought to court, he showed President John Adams, his invention of changeable parts for muskets, which sooner or later, industrialized America. Both of these inventions changed the USA because it made things go a lot faster in the production of cotton, and muskets. Eli Whitney today is called the Father of Technology because of his brilliant inventions of the Cotton Gin, and changeable parts. In 1817, Whitney, then in his early 50s, married Henrietta Edwards, with whom he would have four children. He died on January 8, 1825, at age
Eli Whitney is also invented the idea of changeable parts, for example, after inventing the Cotton Gin, Eli Whitney had obtained a government contract to make 10,000 muskets in two years. This was a very short amount of time, because you had to make a musket one at a time. At the end of two years, he did not even make one, and when he was brought to court, he showed President John Adams, his invention of changeable parts for muskets, which sooner or later, industrialized America. Both of these inventions changed the USA because it made things go a lot faster in the production of cotton, and muskets. Eli Whitney today is called the Father of Technology because of his brilliant inventions of the Cotton Gin, and changeable parts. In 1817, Whitney, then in his early 50s, married Henrietta Edwards, with whom he would have four children. He died on January 8, 1825, at age