# 3870 - 2004 37c R. Buckminster Fuller
2004 37¢ Buckminster Fuller
City: Stanford, CA
Quantity: 60,000,000
Birth Of Buckminster Fuller
The grandson of American Transcendentalist Margaret Fuller, Buckminster spent much of his youth on Bear Island in Penobscot Bay. As a child, he struggled with geometry in school but enjoyed making his own tools and other items from things he found in the woods. He even designed a new device to propel small boats.
By the time he was 12 years old, Fuller invented a push-pull system for propelling a rowboat. He attended the Milton Academy and Harvard College but was expelled twice for partying and lack of interest. He then earned a machinist’s certification.
In the 1940s, Fuller began working on the geodesic dome. Though Dr. Walter Bauersfeld had invented the dome 30 years earlier, Fuller received US patents for his designs. His dome used multiple tetrahedrons (triangular pyramids). The geodesic dome was the first building that could sustain its own weight regardless of size. There are now over 300,000 domes in the world.
Click here for more from the Buckminster Fuller Institute.
2004 37¢ Buckminster Fuller
City: Stanford, CA
Quantity: 60,000,000
Birth Of Buckminster Fuller
The grandson of American Transcendentalist Margaret Fuller, Buckminster spent much of his youth on Bear Island in Penobscot Bay. As a child, he struggled with geometry in school but enjoyed making his own tools and other items from things he found in the woods. He even designed a new device to propel small boats.
By the time he was 12 years old, Fuller invented a push-pull system for propelling a rowboat. He attended the Milton Academy and Harvard College but was expelled twice for partying and lack of interest. He then earned a machinist’s certification.
In the 1940s, Fuller began working on the geodesic dome. Though Dr. Walter Bauersfeld had invented the dome 30 years earlier, Fuller received US patents for his designs. His dome used multiple tetrahedrons (triangular pyramids). The geodesic dome was the first building that could sustain its own weight regardless of size. There are now over 300,000 domes in the world.
Click here for more from the Buckminster Fuller Institute.