Benjamin Banneker

@Compiler of Almanacs, Timeline and Childhood

Benjamin Bannekar was an African American scientist and a strong advocate of racial equality

Nov 9, 1731

MarylandAfrican American MathematiciansAfrican American ScientistsAfrican AmericansBlack InventorsBlack ScientistsAmericanActivistsCivil Rights ActivistsAstronomersScorpio Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: November 9, 1731
  • Died on: October 9, 1806
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Compiler of Almanacs, African American Mathematicians, African American Scientists, African Americans, Black Inventors, Black Scientists, Activists, Civil Rights Activists, Astronomers
  • City/State: Maryland
  • Birth Place: Baltimore County
  • Religion: African Methodist Episcopal Church

Benjamin Banneker born at

Baltimore County

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Birth Place

Benjamin Bannekar did not marry and pursued his scientific studies all through his life. He did not have any relationship with any woman in his life.

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Personal Life

After the publication of his almanac stopped, he sold a major portion of his farm to the Ellicott and some of the other people so that he could meet the ends and continued to live in his log cabin.

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Personal Life

Benjamin died On 9 October 1806, while sleeping after coming back from his daily morning walk, just a month before his 75th birthday.

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Personal Life

Benjamin Banneker was born on 9 November 1731, at Ellicott’s Mills, in Maryland. His father, Robert, was an ex-slave and his mother‘s name was Mary Banneky.

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Childhood & Early Life

Bannekar’s parents were free and so he could escape the chains of slavery as well. He learnt reading from his maternal grandmother and attended a small Quaker school for a brief time.

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Childhood & Early Life

His brilliance can be understood from the fact that he was mostly a self-educated man who achieved much in his life through his own efforts.

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Childhood & Early Life

His initial achievements included designing an irrigation system for his family farm and constructing a wooden clock that had the reputation of keeping accurate time. In fact the clock functioned for over 50 years till Benjamin’s death.

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Childhood & Early Life

Apart from these contributions, Benjamin learnt all about astronomy by himself and could do accurate forecasting of lunar and solar eclipses. After his father passed way, he managed his own farm for several years and developed a business for selling tobacco through crops.

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Childhood & Early Life

Bannekar’s talent was noticed by the Ellicot family, who were his neighbor and renowned entrepreneurs of the Baltimore area. Banneker was friends with the Ellicot Brothers, of whom George Ellicot was also in the field of astronomy and mathematics.

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Later Life

George Ellicott lent Bannekar many books on astronomy and a telescope and tools that were used in astronomy. Bannekar learnt astronomy all by himself.

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Later Life

In 1789, he accurately predicted a solar eclipse and became the first African-American to be appointed to the President's Capital Commission.

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Later Life

In 1791, Andrew Ellicot, one of the members of the family hired Benjamin to assist him in surveying the territory for the capital city of the nation. Bannekar worked in an observatory tent and used a zenith sector for recording the movement of the stars. But Banneker suffered from a sudden illness that made him leave the work after three months.

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Later Life

Benjamin was hugely acclaimed for his almanacs that were published from 1792 to 1797 and contained valuable information about literature, medical, opinion pieces and his very own astronomical calculations.

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Later Life

In 1753, when Banneker was only 22, he constructed a wooden clock that struck on every hour. He seemed to have modeled this clock from a pocket watch that he had borrowed, and the clock functioned till Benjamin passed away.

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Major Works

His famous almanacs were published consecutively for six consecutive years from 1792 to 1797. The almanacs contained valuable information on various subjects and fields and Bannekar did all the calculations by himself.

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Major Works

Benjamin also produced a dissertation on bees and calculated the cycle of 17-year locust.

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Major Works