
A sweeping survey of the nineteenth‑century surge in human ingenuity, this work draws a clear line between inventions—practical devices crafted for everyday use—and scientific discoveries that reveal nature’s hidden laws. Beginning with timeless milestones such as the alphabet, the compass, and the printing press, the author shows how each breakthrough builds on earlier ideas, weaving a narrative that links the telescope’s invention to Newton’s law of gravitation and the telegraph’s reliance on electrical theory.
The book then turns its focus to the remarkable inventions and discoveries that defined the era: spectroscopes, railways, telephones, and steamships, alongside breakthroughs in chemistry, medicine, and physics. By exploring the interplay of theory and application, it highlights how the period’s inventors stood on the shoulders of their predecessors, turning abstract principles into tangible tools that reshaped daily life. Readers come away with a richer appreciation of how the relentless march of innovation in the 1800s laid the groundwork for the modern world.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (821K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Chris Curnow, Stephanie Kovalchik and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2011-07-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
b. 1844
A patent expert and former U.S. Patent Office official, he wrote with the curiosity of someone who had spent years close to new ideas as they became real. His best-known work looks back at the inventions that reshaped everyday life in the nineteenth century.
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