Children have the ability to create intriguing ideas and incredible inventions. Here are some of them that have survived the test of time.
Here we explore some of the most unique and effective innovations brought forth by youngsters.
The popsicle
Water or milk-based frozen snack on a stick as an ice pop. Unlike ice cream or sorbet, which are mashed while freezing by whipping to prevent the emergence of ice crystals, an ice cube is frozen while at rest and becomes a solid block of ice.
An 11-year-old boy named Frank Epperson, back in 1905, a San Francisco Bay Area accidentally invented the summertime treat.
His idea never left him, but he didn’t make an attempt to promote it right away, although he patented it in 1924.
Swimming flippers
As an 11-year-old, he wanted to be an entrepreneur in Boston when he invented an oval-shaped engineering device that consisted of holes. Dozens of other inventions like bifocals, the lightning rod are invented by Benjamin Franklin. Initially, his push slipped onto his hands, whereas shortly thereafter we moved to our feet.
A possible cancer cure
During high school, Angela Zhang worked with a Stanford grad student to research the cancer-fighting potential of a single nanoparticle. The results of the research put her in the middle of the science fair circuit. In 2011, she competed in the Siemens Competition in Math, Science & Technology, where she garnered a $100,000 scholarship, and the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, where the results of her cancer-killing nanoparticle research brought her first-prize awards.
She developed the technology of a specialized nanoparticle system to explain dangerous material in cells without negatively affecting health, and in initial tests on mice, she had been able to demonstrate that the impact was a near-complete replacement of tumors. The judges were full of admiration for her work so they awarded her the $100,000 grand prize. She’s now studying at Harvard, and Her motivation to establish a youth science advocacy association led to the forming of a nonprofit called Labs on Wheels to help other young people gain access to the science and math opportunities that she’s gained so much opportunity from.
The trampoline

Image Credit: Kevin K via Flickr. Licensed under CC BY 2.0.
A trampoline is a device consisting of a piece of taut, strong fabric stretched between a steel frame using many coiled springs. For most people today, the trampoline has been something that has always been around. Plenty of people have fun memories of jumping on a trampoline in their own or a friend’s backyard during the spring or summer.
But what about the history of the trampoline? Who got the idea to invent the first trampoline, and what gave that person that idea? The version of the trampoline dates back to the early 20th century when 16-year-old George Nissen wanted to build a contraption to safely lift gymnasts and trapeze artists up in the air following their drops.
The Nissen Trio gymnastic troupe was a famous troupe of the past. In 2000, the tiny trampoline reached its highest measurement ever due to an event that occurred in the Sydney Olympics.
A safety device for textile mills
Margaret Knight was born in York, Maine in 1838, and witnessed a serious accident at the age of 12 as she was working in textile mills from a young age. At that age, she started thinking for ways to prevent this from happening. She developed a safety device that would halt production on the machines when there was something caught in them.
Like many other inventors, starting at a young age, this was just the beginning to her inventions. Later she invented other successful inventions such the machine that folds and the bottoms of paper bags was glued, which is still used today to produce the grocery store bags.
Photo by Pragyan Bezbaruah from Pexels