Who invented the telephone, the telegraph, the steamship, the steam locomotive, and the airplane?

The telephone is a device that transmits voice in both directions via electrical signals. Alexander Graham Bell is often credited with inventing the telephone. The United States Congress recognized Antonio Meucci as the inventor of the telephone on June 15, 2002, by Resolution 269 of the United States Congress. The word "telephone" is a Chinese word coined by the Japanese to translate the English word telephone, which was later introduced to China.

The world's first steamship was built by the American inventor Fulton. He was building the first steam engine ship in France in the spring of 1802 and moored it on the Seine River when a storm snapped it. The first ship to be propelled entirely by steam power was the Piroskapi, built by the Frenchman Marquis, and the oceans of the 19th century were dominated by steamships, which ultimately brought sailing ships into the museum of ships. The steamship was invented by Fulton in 1769.

In 1814, the Englishman Stephen Sun invented the first steam locomotive, since then, mankind has accelerated into the industrial age, the steam locomotive has become an important symbol and key tool for cultural and social progress in this era.

In the early 20th century, the Wright Brothers of the United States made a significant contribution to the history of airplane development in the world. In 1903, the Wright Brothers produced the first aircraft that relied on its own power for manned flight, "Aviator" No. 1, and obtained a successful test flight.