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Inducted 2011 Charles Jenkins was an innovator of early cinema and one of the first inventors of television, though he used mechanical rather than electronic technologies. Over the course of his career as an inventor, he secured hundreds of patents. Invention Impact Jenkins started experimenting with movie film in 1891 and soon quit his job to focus on improving his movie projector, the Phantoscope. In 1894, Jenkins showed his parents, friends, and newsmen his “motion picture projecting box,” projecting a short reel film which he had filmed himself. Jenkins’ demonstration is regarded as one of the first times an audience watched a projected movie. Jenkins attended the Bliss School of Electricity, in Washington, D.C., where he met his fellow classmate Thomas Armat, and together they improved the design. They did a public screening at the Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta in 1895. Jenkins eventually sold his interest in the projector to Armat, who in turn sold to Thomas Edison who marketed the projector under the name Vitascope. Inventor Bio Charles Francis Jenkins was born in Dayton, OH. He attended the Bliss School of Electricity in Washington, DC. He received the Elliot Cresson Medal in 1897 and the John Scott Medal in 1913. |
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