Richard was an exceptional thinker, always trying to come up
with new ideas and follow in the footsteps of his inventor father. His father
was a plantation owner and worked in designing tools and equipment that would
aid in farming techniques and ultimate crop success. Richard wanted to be just like his dad.
His first invention was a screw mechanism for propelling
watercraft. He did follow his father's desire to help farmers when he invented
a new kind of seeder for wheat and rice. His inventions to make existing
products better was always on his mind, and he contributed greatly to new
designs of bicycles, steam engines, toilets and more.
There was a time when Richard became interested in medicine
and decided to go to medical school. He
became a doctor but never practiced medicine because of his yearning to keep on
inventing. His specialty was anything that involved, planting or harvesting
crops. Tools had to be built by hand and used to construct the prototype of
whatever he was inventing at the time.
You could say Richard was extremely wealthy with all the new
inventions and innovations he had created.
The truth is, he did make lots of money, however investing his profits
on the next invention, and the next, some of which amounted to nothing, kept
him penniless at times.
You know Richard by the invention he came up with in the
mid-1800s. He devised a weapon with rotating barrels around a common firing
chamber, which would fire about 350 rounds per minute. Later improvements he
made to the weapon made it capable of firing 1,200 rounds per minute. You know
Richard by the gun that bears his name, Gatling...Richard Jordan Gatling and
his Gatling gun. The United States government and governments of numerous
foreign countries purchased the guns and used them primarily in some smaller
wars, and ultimately for their own national security. In 1911, our government
declared the weapon obsolete and ceased using it.
I did some further research on Richard but was unable to
find any mention of his religious affiliation, and no mention of any personal
relationship with God. While it would have been good to have learned all of
that, it isn't the point of my story about Richard.
There is no way to calculate the number of lives he touched
with the things he invented which helped everything from farming to
construction, and bicycling to steam powered ships and tractors. I readily admit there is no way to calculate
the number of lives terminated through the use of the weapons he designed, nor
is there a way to calculate the number of lives saved with the military
strength his weapons stood for.
I wanted you to see a life that took a God-given talent and
utilized it for the benefit of others. In seeing a life like that, I hope we
can all come to appreciate the great or small abilities we are given by God,
and use the encouragement of Richard's example to do something for the benefit
of others. God blesses us in numerous ways. He loves us and desires that we can
use the things we are given, to be a blessing to others.
<ronbwriting@gmail.com>
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