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Hardcover Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology, 1880-1940 Book

ISBN: 0262140489

ISBN13: 9780262140485

Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology, 1880-1940

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Book Overview

Winner, Abel Wolman award given by the Public Works Historical Society and American Public Works Association, 1990. and Winner of the 1993 Edelstein Prize sponsored by the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT) How did electricity enter everyday life in America? Using Muncie, Indiana - the Lynds' now iconic Middletown - as a touchstone, David Nye explores how electricity seeped into and redefined American culture. With an eye for telling details...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

The history of electrification and an important glimpse into life in late 19th to early 20th Century

Electrifying America is one of the most interesting books I've ever read. Reading it is almost like traveling back to the time of gaslight and candles when homes had no appliances and electric streetcars allowed creation of the first suburbs. The book is more about the impact of electricity on everyday life than about the great personalities of the influential innovators like Edison, Tesla, Insull and Ford, who are only given casual mention. Electrifying America begins at the time of the great expositions, or Worlds Fairs, such as the Pan American, Trans Mississippi, Panama Pacific and the tremendously popular Columbian (Chicago 1892-3) where there were elaborate displays of lighting and exhibits of the latest electrical equipment. It also tells of the early public demonstarations of street lighting. Being an engineer and a researcher of productivity, I especially appreciated the discussion of the enormous manpower savings made possible by electrifying factories. An example given was a glass jar manufacturing company that replaced manual glass blowers with machinery and used things like an overhead (bridge) crane to move heavy items across the factory. In addition to drastic labor savings total output increased several fold. Electric lighting greatly improved working conditions in factories and also greatly reduced fires, with large reductions in insurance premiums, often enough to pay for the lighting. Another well described example is the Ford River Rouge plant, which was the world's largest factory, built for maximum efficiency and the first large scale center of mass production. Nye describes how electricity made completely new plant layouts possible and how electric motors revolutionized machine tools. (Eighty years later I was still using techniques like those pioneered at River Rouge to design manufacturing plants). There is presented little in the way of statistical analysis, science or engineering. Economists should note that the decades of the highest economic growth in US history, 1890 to 1910, coincided with the beginnings of electrification and the street railway system. For the impact of efficiency in electrical generation see Ayes, Ayres and Warr's papers "Exergy, Power and Work in the US Economy 1900-1998" and "Accounting for Growth: The Role of Physical Work", which update thinking about economics. While cities were electrified by the end of the 1920's, the vast majority of farms did not have electricity until the late 1940's, largely made possible through the efforts of the Rural Electrification Administration and the Tennessee Valley Authority. Nye discusses the modern electrified household with new labor saving appliances like electric irons, washing machines, toasters and ranges. He also discusses the changing role of women in the workplace, the decline of domestic servants, the beginning of home economics, and the change from skilled artisans to semi-skilled factory workers. Electricity's influence on ar

A fantastic history of the development of electricity

Did you know, in the early days of electricity, the power went off at 11:00 pm each night? Or that electricity was billed at a flat rate of $1 per day? Or that most homes had only one or two outlets and a light bulb hanging from a string?This book is a compendium of both fascinating facts and substantial histories of the development of residential electrical usage in our country.I love old houses and historical information, and perhaps because of that, I found this book to be a fascinating read. Some parts of it were a wee bit dry, where he delved into some of the more technical aspects of this modern utility, but the majority of the book was a treasure.After reading this book, and gaining an better understanding of the history of electricity, I'd say, without hesitation, that introducing the modern convenience of electrical current into our homes may be the most significant discovery of the last 500 years.
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