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#027 - The Eye Beneath the Waves

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Manage episode 498928143 series 3666894
Content provided by EX OBSCURITATE Productions. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by EX OBSCURITATE Productions or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Title: Sarah Mather – The Eye Beneath the Waves Episode: Season 4, Episode 2 Summary: In 1845, Sarah Mather received a U.S. patent for a device that allowed sailors to see beneath the surface of the water without diving in. Her “Submarine Telescope and Lamp” combined simple optics with practical design—revolutionizing ship inspections, aiding Civil War reconnaissance, and quietly shaping the future of undersea exploration. As one of the few women to receive a mechanical patent in the 19th century—especially in the naval sphere—Mather’s invention remains both technically impressive and historically overlooked. This episode explores her innovation, its wartime applications, and its hidden legacy in modern marine technology. Topics Covered: • Sarah Mather’s invention and the 1845 U.S. patent • Optical and mechanical principles of the submarine telescope • Wartime use during the American Civil War • Involvement of her son, Thomas Mather, and subsequent refinements • The early evolution of underwater viewing and detection tools • The marginalization of women inventors in 19th-century America • The philosophical legacy of making the invisible visible Keywords: Sarah Mather, submarine telescope, underwater optics, women inventors, naval technology, Civil War innovation, 19th century patents, maritime history, Thomas Mather, undersea exploration, hidden inventors, underwater inspection Historical Context: In an era when women were excluded from the worlds of science, technology, and military innovation, Sarah Mather’s underwater viewing device represented both a technical achievement and a cultural anomaly. Her work prefigured the modern fields of marine observation and undersea robotics—quietly proving that vision doesn’t always come from the spotlight.

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30 episodes

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Manage episode 498928143 series 3666894
Content provided by EX OBSCURITATE Productions. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by EX OBSCURITATE Productions or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Title: Sarah Mather – The Eye Beneath the Waves Episode: Season 4, Episode 2 Summary: In 1845, Sarah Mather received a U.S. patent for a device that allowed sailors to see beneath the surface of the water without diving in. Her “Submarine Telescope and Lamp” combined simple optics with practical design—revolutionizing ship inspections, aiding Civil War reconnaissance, and quietly shaping the future of undersea exploration. As one of the few women to receive a mechanical patent in the 19th century—especially in the naval sphere—Mather’s invention remains both technically impressive and historically overlooked. This episode explores her innovation, its wartime applications, and its hidden legacy in modern marine technology. Topics Covered: • Sarah Mather’s invention and the 1845 U.S. patent • Optical and mechanical principles of the submarine telescope • Wartime use during the American Civil War • Involvement of her son, Thomas Mather, and subsequent refinements • The early evolution of underwater viewing and detection tools • The marginalization of women inventors in 19th-century America • The philosophical legacy of making the invisible visible Keywords: Sarah Mather, submarine telescope, underwater optics, women inventors, naval technology, Civil War innovation, 19th century patents, maritime history, Thomas Mather, undersea exploration, hidden inventors, underwater inspection Historical Context: In an era when women were excluded from the worlds of science, technology, and military innovation, Sarah Mather’s underwater viewing device represented both a technical achievement and a cultural anomaly. Her work prefigured the modern fields of marine observation and undersea robotics—quietly proving that vision doesn’t always come from the spotlight.

  continue reading

30 episodes

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