I visited a museum about HVAC

I am a person who loves to go to museums.

  • It really doesn’t matter what kind of Museum it is, actually, because I like to learn about the history of just about anything.

I have been to the Country Music Museum or Hall of fame. I have been to museums set up as shrines or alongside shrines for people destined to sainthood. I have even been to a little tiny Museum in the Southeast that pays tribute to a man who is said to have started the whole air conditioning movement. way back about 2 or 300 years ago, there was a doctor named John gory. He worked with patients in a hospital or sometimes called a sanitarium. The patients were suffering from TB, otherwise known as tuberculosis. The TV patients at that time suffered miserably, and they especially suffered during the hot months of the year in the southeastern United states. That is where I currently live, the southeastern United states. If you have ever been here, you know that the heat and humidity in the Southeast is atrocious. If we did not have air conditioning, I am convinced that no one would live in my state. The exception might be the natives who lived here before we came along, but nowadays, the ancestors of those natives also are accustomed to air conditioning. We don’t have to use heating quite so much, but even every once in a while we do have to count on our furnace in the winter. Anyway, I am getting sidetracked away from the museum about the father of air conditioning. Dr gory decided one day that the miserable heat was not helping his patients recover, so he came up with a cooling device. it was very crude, in that it was simply a fan blowing on a large block of ice. as the ice melted and the fan blew on it, the patients got cool. voila! air conditioning! and our city and state has grown by Leaps and Bounds ever since then.

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