Ed Headrick
You may not know the name Ed Headrick, but you know his most famous creation. Chances are, no matter how old you are, you’ve spent time playing with a Frisbee, which Headrick came up with when he saw a few youths tossing a tin pie plate back and forth. It didn’t exactly take a genius to come up with the Frisbee, is what we’re saying.
Headrick considered the Frisbee “a religion,” and asked for his ashes to be mixed with a set of limited-edition Frisbees. You wouldn’t be reading about it if it didn’t happen, and since Headrick only died in 2010, it’s still possible to find these…unique items.
George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw – famous author and playwright – had a b-e-e-f with the alphabet. He was thought to dislike it so much, that when he died in 1950, he left behind a significant sum, dedicated to the creation of a new alphabet. His few requirements were that it had to be phonetic, and be forty characters long. By the end of 1950, the Shaw Alphabet had been created.
It utilizes three types of letters: tall, deep, and short. Short letters are vowels, liquids (such as r and l), and nasals. Tall letters are voiceless consonants (save a few exceptions). Tall letters rotated a hundred and eighty degrees become a deep letter, representing a corresponding voiced consonant.
Mark Gruenwald
If you like Marvel comics, the MCU, or any of the Marvel characters, then you have Mark Gruenwald to thank. He was the executive editor of both Captain American and Iron Man, and held hundreds of smaller jobs within other sectors of Marvel during his time with the superhero comic giant.
So great was his love for the industry in general that when he died, he stipulated that he was to be cremated, and his ashes were to be mixed with the ink used to print comic books. This was done, and now Gruenwald is part of a paperback compilation of...Squadron Supreme. Come on, not even Fantastic Four?
Gloria Bechal
While British millionaire Gloria Bechel led a normal life – as much as a British millionaire does, at least – but one thing about her tends to stand out. She really, really loved Cantonese food. She loved one restaurant in particular so much that she left almost her entire fortune, to the tune of about ten million pounds, to the restaurant when she died.
Her family disputed the will – you have to admit, it's an odd one – but the courts ruled in favor of the restaurant. Notice that we said the restaurant, not the owners. No doubt their lives were enriched, but it's not like she gifted them the money personally.
Benjamin Franklin
One of the founding fathers of the United States of America was also a father to a few children, and in his will, he left a portrait frame, and a specific request, to his daughter Sarah. The request was that she “not engage the expensive, vain, and useless pastime of wearing jewels.” Ben was never one to mince words.
But why give his daughter such an odd request? The portrait frame he left her contained over four hundred diamonds – no doubt he wanted to avoid her plundering the frame. According to the history we know, Sarah Franklin Bache ignored his request and tore the frame to shreds for the diamonds.