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Benjamin Banneker has been called the first African American
intellectual. Self-taught, after studying the inner workings of a
friend's watch, he made one of wood that accurately kept time for more
than 40 years. Banneker taught himself astronomy well enough to
correctly predict a solar eclipse in 1789. From 1791 to 1802 he
published the Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia Almanac
and Ephemeris, which contained tide tables, future eclipses, and
medicinal formulas. It is believed to be the first scientific book
published by an African American. Also a surveyor and mathematician,
Banneker was appointed by
President George Washington to the
District of Columbia Commission, which was responsible for the survey
work that established the city's original boundaries. When the
chairman of the committee, Pierre Charles L'Enfant, suddenly resigned
and left, taking the plans with him, Banneker reproduced the plans
from memory, saving valuable time. A staunch opponent of slavery,
Banneker sent a copy of his first almanac to then-Secretary of State
Thomas Jefferson to counter
Jefferson's belief in the intellectual inferiority of blacks.
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