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The Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century

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The 1800s saw a meteoric rise in modern technology in many areas. The century set the stage for modern life with developments such as the electric light, the electric motor, the telephone, the sewing machine, the automobile, and X-rays. The difference between life in 1800 and 1900 is extreme, as the pace of invention in the 19th century rapidly increased.

This book, published in 1900, is an overview of the major areas of technological change that ushered in life as it was in the 20th century. Many more changes were to come, as we know by our experience of life in the 21st. But the basis of developments up to the present day began to be built over 200 years ago.

“Whatever the future centuries may bring in new and useful inventions, certain it is that the Nineteenth Century stands pre-eminent in this field of human achievement, so far excelling all other like periods as to establish on the pages of history an epoch as remarkable as it is unique. Never before has human conception so expressed itself in materialized embodiment, never has thought been so fruitfully wedded to the pregnant possibilities of matter, never has the divine function of creation been so closely approximated, never has such an accretion of helpful instrumentalities and material resources been added to the world’s wealth… ideas wrought into practical, substantive things, tried and proven true, these are inventions—immortal creations—and of these the Nineteenth Century has borne fruit in paramount abundance, and this legacy it now bequeaths to the coming century.” - Summary by Verla Viera and Epilogue (16 hr 38 min)

Chapters

Preface; Chapter I The Perspective View

13:56

Read by Verla Viera

Chapter II Chronology of Leading Inventions of the Nineteenth Century

24:25

Read by Verla Viera

Chapter III The Electric Telegraph

31:58

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter IV The Atlantic Cable

15:18

Read by Louise Jaeschke

Chapter V The Dynamo and Its Applications

20:12

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter VI The Electric Motor

21:41

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter VII The Electric Light

19:21

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter VIII The Telephone

29:54

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter IX Electricity, Miscellaneous

21:48

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter X The Steam Engine

34:50

Read by Louise Jaeschke

Chapter XI The Steam Railway

25:06

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XII Steam Navigation

38:47

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XIII Printing

24:59

Read by Peter Nenyuk

Chapter XIV The Typewriter

24:18

Read by Verla Viera

Chapter XV The Sewing Machine

41:18

Read by Faith Abiola-Ellison

Chapter XVI The Reaper

32:05

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XVII Vulcanized Rubber

25:44

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XVIII Chemistry

26:22

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XIX Food and Drink

35:55

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XX Medicine, Surgery, and Sanitation

34:59

Read by Beeswaxcandle

Chapter XXI The Bicycle and Automobile

27:35

Read by bilwelvox

Chapter XXII The Phonograph

27:06

Read by bilwelvox

Chapter XXIII Optics

35:26

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXIV Photography

38:47

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXV The Roentgen or X-Rays

18:38

Read by Piotr Nater

Chapter XXVI Gas Lighting

25:36

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXVII Civil Engineering

42:11

Read by jenno

Chapter XXVIII Woodworking

27:16

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXIX, Part 1 Metal Working

27:49

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXIX, Part 2 Metal Working

27:17

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXX, Part 1 Fire Arms and Explosives

26:39

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXX, Part 2 Fire Arms and Explosives

30:00

Read by Bryan Travis

Chapter XXXI Textiles

34:02

Read by jenno

Chapter XXXII Ice Machines

21:31

Read by Verla Viera

Chapter XXXIII Liquid Air

20:29

Read by April6090

Chapter XXXIV Minor Inventions, and Patents of Principal Countries of the World

18:42

Read by April6090

Chapter XXXV Epilogue

6:33

Read by Verla Viera