Did You Know...

This is my page of little-known facts. Little known fact #1: I am a trivia junkie. Yes indeed, I love those game shows! I enjoy gathering knowledge that has little or no value in the real world, but can win you a lot of money on shows like Jeopardy! Who knows, I just might make it to that show one day. In the meantime, here are some of the facts I've picked up over the years. I'll update this page regularly, because I wouldn't want you good people to get bored. Now, here's the scoop...





1. It's widely known that Alexander Graham Bell beat Elisha Gray to the patent office by a mere two hours with his application to patent the telephone. However, ten years after Bell's patent was issued, patent examiner Zenas Wilber admitted in a sworn affadavit that he had taken a $100 bribe from Bell, had taken a loan from Bell's patent attorney, and had given Bell the complete details of Gray's caveat. Hmmmm....

( Source: Inventor's Digest, July/August 1998, pages 26-28)



2. Judging from the time and money that the candidates are spending on the campaign, it seems as if they are just dying to be elected president. But there are many people who are betting that the reverse is also true: whoever is elected in 2000 will die in office. Now *you* don't believe that old urban legend about years divisible by 20, do you? Maybe you should. It isn't exactly true, but . . . the winner may have trouble buying life insurance. So far, nine presidents were elected in years divisible by 20. Six died before their term ended: William Henry Harrison (1840), Lincoln (1860), Garfield (1880), McKinley (1900), Harding (1920), and Kennedy (1960). Franklin D. Roosevelt was reelected in 1940 but died in 1945, after his 1944 reelection. So that's really seven out of nine. Maybe they should be running from, not for the office this year.

(Source: MYTH-INFORMED by Paul Dickson & Joseph C. Goulden)



3. It's 1687 and a coffee house near London's riverfront is becoming a popular spot for seafarers and traders. As a courtesy, the owner, Edward Lloyd, posts daily shipping schedules for patrons who negotiate funding for future voyages - an early form of insurance.These "underwriters" eventually buy the coffee house and turn it into a world-class insurance association. Today, Lloyd's of London is renowned for insuring the uninsurable: a film stars' legs; the "unsinkable" Titanic; a satellite in space. Though he never sold any—Edward Lloyd's name is synonymous with insurance… since it all began… over a cup of his coffee!

(Source: The Time Lab 2000 Project)



4. Babies are born without kneecaps. They don't appear until the child reaches 2 - 6 years of age.



5. The oldest business in the United States of America is the cymbal company Zildjian which was founded in Constantinople in 1623.

(Source: American Heritage of Invention & Technology, Winter 2000)