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            Alfred was born in Sweden in 1837, the son of an inventor who 
            built bridges and buildings in Stockholm. When Alfred was 9, he 
            moved to Russia with his family. His father had hired private 
            teachers so that he and his three brothers could receive the finest 
            education possible. As a teenager, Alfred studied in the United 
            States from 1850 to 1852, and he also visited Paris during this 
            time. It was in Paris that he first learned about nitroglycerin.
              
            Alfred wrote poetry and drama, and at one point in his life had 
            seriously considered a career in literature. His favorite subject, 
            though, was chemistry. Remember that as you get closer to the end of 
            this story. 
            While in his early 20s, Alfred set up a lab in Stockholm in 1859 
            with his father and younger brother to experiment with 
            nitroglycerin. They saw that nitroglycerin had some advantages over 
            gunpowder and could be used for commercial purposes. As they 
            conducted their experiments over the years, there was the occasional 
            lab explosion. Later, in 1864, one of these explosions killed his 
            brother and several other people. 
            By 1866, Alfred had invented dynamite, when he was just 29 years 
            old. He had achieved a far greater level of success than most 
            inventors his age. He built laboratories in more than 20 countries 
            all over the world and eventually held more than 350 patents. His 
            patents included synthetic rubber, leather and artificial silk. The 
            company that he bought in 1893 is today known all over the world as 
            a manufacturer of munitions and firearms.       
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            this article] 
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            With all his success, Alfred liked the idea of some day giving 
            away his fortune. Maybe he felt a need to atone for the fact that 
            his most famous invention -- dynamite -- was sometimes responsible 
            for the deaths of innocent people. He established an annual prize to 
            reward those who make the biggest contributions to society each 
            year. What types of contributions did he reward?   
            They are divided into five classifications:
              
                          physicschemistryphysiology and medicineliterature
              peace
                
                      If this list looks familiar to you, it's because the Nobel Prizes 
            contain the same five classifications of prizes.   
            Yes, the person who invented dynamite is the same person who is 
            responsible for the Nobel Peace Prize … Alfred Nobel.   Nobel died of a cerebral hemorrhage in his home in San Remo, 
            Italy, in 1896. The prizes that bear his name were established four 
            years later, as he had specified in his will.   [Paul 
            Niemann] Paul Niemann is a contributing author to Inventors' Digest 
            magazine, and he also runs MarketLaunchers.com, helping people in 
            the marketing of their new product ideas. He can be reached at
            niemann7@aol.com.  Last week's 
            column in LDN:
            "Invention 
            Mysteries pop quiz" |