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In his classic study, Democracy in America
(1835-40), Alexis de Tocqueville titled one of his chapters,
“Why the Americans are more Addicted to Practical
rather than Theoretical Science.” He observed
that the political and social conditions that fostered
a spirit of individualism and freedom of thought also
resulted in a pragmatic application of scientific knowledge.
“The Americans,” he wrote, “always
display a clear, free, original, and inventive power
of mind.”
Any discussion of what de Tocqueville called “the
inventive power of mind” in nineteenth century
America needs to pay attention to the connection between
technological innovations and the political, social,
cultural, and economic circumstances of an emerging
democracy. At the beginning of the century, the United
States had barely secured its independence from Great
Britain and had embarked on an ambitious strategy to
expand its boundaries westward to the Pacific Ocean.
During the middle years of the 1800s, a series of major
military conflicts including the Mexican War, the Civil
War, and the Indians Wars resulted in the abolition
of slavery and the development of an industrial economy.
By the end of the century, the United States had become
a world power recognized for its extraordinary technological
achievements.
One of the driving forces behind the American system
of technological innovation was the United States Patent
Office. The Constitution of the United States authorized
Congress “to promote the progress of science and
useful arts by securing for limited times to authors
and inventors the exclusive right to their respective
writings and inventions.” In the early 1790s,
the Congress established new procedures to secure patents
and this process remained in place until 1836. Under
this system, some of the most famous inventors in American
history secured patents including Eli Whitney for the
cotton gin in 1794, Eleuthere du Pont for the improved
manufacture of gunpowder in 1804, and Robert Fulton
for the steamboat in 1809.
In 1836, about the same time that de Toqueville’s
essays first appeared in print, the U.S. Congress radically
changed the patent process and also provided funding
for a new Patent Office building. This magnificent structure
became the symbol of American commitment to technological
innovation. Among the provisions of the 1836 law was
a requirement for patent models to be submitted with
each application. The models became highly effective
tools to communicate the originality and special features
of various inventions. The number of patents issued
by the office rose in dramatic and spectacular fashion.
From 1790 to 1840 the office issued a total of 11,500
patents; in the years between 1840 and 1900, the number
of approved patents swelled to more than 682,000! “The
patent system added the fuel of interest to the fire
of genius,” noted Abraham Lincoln, himself a recipient
of a patent for a device to raise steamboats over sandbars.
The other major influence that drove America’s
technological development was the spectacular expansion
of the nation’s boundaries, population, and economy.
The territorial size of the United States quadrupled
from 1800 to 1900, a nation spanning the continent from
Atlantic to Pacific. The census of 1800 recorded a total
population of 5.3 million people; by 1900, the United
States was home to more than 75 million. The need to
connect and supply this expansive nation encouraged
the development of innovations in transportation, communication,
and manufacturing.
The shaping technology of the nineteenth century was
steam power. The steam engine, developed first in England
and later refined in the United States and other industrializing
nations, provided a more reliable and powerful source
of power than water or wind. The impact of steam power
is evident in the growth of iron industry to build engines
and steam-driven machinery and in the expansion of coal
mining to provide fuel. American cities became centers
of steam-powered manufacturing and by 1900 nearly forty
percent of the population lived in urban areas, a seven-fold
increase from 1800.
The most significant innovation in the Age of Steam
was the development of railroads. The first American
railroad was the Baltimore and Ohio that began service
in 1828. By 1840 there were 2,818 miles of track in
the United States. The number of track mileage grew
to more than 30,000 miles by the Civil War and almost
200,000 miles by 1900—forty percent of the world’s
total. The railroads symbolized America’s technological
ambitions, and the completion of the first transcontinental
rail link in 1869 was one of the defining moments in
the history of the nation, a prodigious feat of engineering,
finance, and labor.
Technological advances changed nearly every aspect of
life in the nineteenth century. A farmer using a wooden
cradle in 1830 could cut four times more wheat than
his counterpart in 1800 using a sickle. After the introduction
of Cyrus McCormick’s reaper in the 1840s, the
same farmer tripled his wheat harvest. Steel manufacturing
was a new industry made possible by technological developments
in England and the United States. The Bessemer process,
developed in the 1850s, increased both the quantity
and quality of steel and transformed the manufacturing
and construction industries.
One immediate impact of the improvement in the quality
of steel occurred in bridge building technology. The
best-known and most successful bridge designer during
this time was John A. Roebling, a German immigrant who
first settled in western Pennsylvania and later established
a steel wire rope factory in Trenton, New Jersey. Roebling’s
creative use of wire rope technology resulted in spectacular
suspension bridges that offered unobstructed passage
for ships and moved rail traffic over challenging barriers.
From the Pittsburgh’s canal aqueduct (1840s) to
the rail and road bridge over the Niagara gorge (1855)
to the Cincinnati suspension bridge over the Ohio River
(1867) to his masterpiece, the Brooklyn Bridge, completed
in 1883 (fourteen years after his death) Roebling’s
daring structures were both functional and beautiful.
The full implications of some technological advances
were not evident for many years or even decades. In
August, 1859, for example, Edwin Drake discovered the
world’s first oil well near Titusville, Pennsylvania
using drilling technology he observed in local salt
mines. By 1900, Pennsylvania produced half of the world’s
oil supply and there was drilling activity in thirteen
other states. However, the uses of oil were limited
in the nineteenth century mostly to illumination and
medical products such as Vaseline jelly. Refining oil
as a fuel and lubricant for cars, ships, and locomotives
and using oil as a base for plastic and synthetic products
would take place in the twentieth century.
The nineteenth century was also a time when inventors
became celebrated as central figures in the spectacular
growth of technology. Through newspapers, scientific
journals, and magazines, Americans learned of the accomplishments
of Cyrus McCormick (reaper) and John Deere (steel plow),
who revolutionized agricultural production in the 1830s.
Samuel Morse’s invention of the telegraph (1835)
and Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone (1876) made
long-distance communication possible in a rapidly expanding
nation. In 1846, Elias Howe patented the sewing machine,
followed by Isaac Singer’s improved version in
1851. The names of other inventors and innovators such
as Charles Goodyear (vulcanized rubber in 1844); George
Pullman (sleeping car in 1859); Oliver Winchester (repeating
rifle in 1860); and Richard Gatling (machine gun in
1862) were inextricably linked with their products.
Thomas A. Edison was without question the dominant figure
among this extraordinary roster of American inventors.
In his lifetime, he amassed more than 1,300 patents
including the electric voting machine (1869); the phonograph
(1878); the incandescent lamp (1879); movie film and
the motion picture camera (1889 and 1891); the radio
(1891). In New York, he constructed the world’s
first central electrical power-plant and in Menlo Park,
New Jersey, he assembled the world’s first industrial
research laboratory. In many respects, Edison symbolized
the uniquely American approach to technology that de
Tocqueville observed earlier in the century.
Edison and his fellow inventors worked in an international
environment that fostered both competition and mutual
support. Europe was a particularly fertile ground for
new technology. A series of expositions and fairs showcased
the latest achievements. Beginning with the Crystal
Palace fair in London in 1851, there were at least ten
major fairs that showcased the technological developments
from nations throughout the world. The United States
hosted three of these fairs including a Crystal Palace
exhibition in New York in 1853; the Centennial exhibition
in Philadelphia in 1876 (attended by ten million visitors
over six months); and the World’s Columbian Exposition
in Chicago in 1893 (attended by twelve million people).
The Chicago fair, attended by twelve million people,
featured a spectacular Manufactures building, the largest
such structure in the world, a dazzling display of electric
lighting, and the newly invented Ferris Wheel.
The great fair in Chicago represented the convergence
of invention, industry, and business. The application
of technology achievements drew upon the entrepreneurial
skills of a rising business class. Andrew Carnegie,
for example, was able to translate the innovations in
steel production into a formidable manufacturing corporation
that eventually became United States Steel. John D.
Rockefeller secured control of the production, refining,
transportation, and distribution of oil through the
Standard Oil Trust. At the end of the century, Henry
Ford, improving on the inventions of European and American
car makers, established a company to manufacture automobiles
at an unprecedented scale.
The enormous scale of these corporate operations resulted
in extraordinary wealth for America’s leaders
of industry, finance, and business. The marriage of
technology and business also offered great opportunities
for millions of American workers; however, the struggle
for wages and a safe workplace led to a series of epic
conflicts between labor and management that erupted
in nearly every major industry. At the same time, government
regulation over industry and business became necessary
to ensure fair competition and to protect consumers.
The impact of technology must be understood in this
broad context. Just as the technology of the nineteenth
century responded to the social and economic needs of
a new and expanding nation, so too did the uses and
consequences of technology extend into every aspect
of life as America entered the modern age of the twentieth
century.
| For a list
of books, websites, and online exhibitions
about nineteenth century technology, visit
our Additional
Resources Page. |
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