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Hardcover The Power Makers: Steam, Electricity, and the Men Who Invented Modern America Book

ISBN: 1596914122

ISBN13: 9781596914124

The Power Makers: Steam, Electricity, and the Men Who Invented Modern America

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

In The Power Makers , one of America's most acclaimed historians of business and society offers an epic narrative of his greatest subject yet--the "power revolution" that transformed American life in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

It's Tough Translating a Technical Subject into Simple Langauge

Book is very good, although the explanations of early alternating current pilots and preliminary designs are a jumble of technical accuracy and layman's language. Not much different from the experiences of a college freshman in a second semester physics class. I also tripped over the use of expressions like "in the limelight", I struggling with whether that was intentional or not in describing the people who installed arc lighting in Manhattan. These minor criticisms aside, it's a great book in bringing the personalities of the inventors into a dry technical subject, and also because the author provides excellent insight into the dramatic leapos in technology that took significant study to theorize, identify through experimentation, and define through physics and mathematics.

A Fine Read

I was born and raised in Schenectady, New York, at a time when the locals still proudly, if a bit ruefully, referred to it as "The City That Lights and Hauls the World" because it was home to both the sprawling General Electric Company and the then-diminishing American Locomotive Company. But I didn't realize until reading this superb book that I never really understood how GE came to evolve out of the earlier Edison enterprises nor how and why it became headquartered in my home town. Nor did I realize how most of the giants behind the "energizing" of America, men like Edison, Westinghouse, Tesla, and Insull ended their lives, with the exception of Edison, disassociated from their great innovations, disillusioned with their business undertakings, and in the case of Insull, the unheralded pioneer of electric power distribution, indicted. I do now, thanks to this marvelously well-written survey of the history of steam and electricity in our country. I agree with the other reviewers that the technical discussions get a bit "thick" from time to time, and even perhaps fall somewhat short of how senior MIT and RPI engineering wonks would set them out, but I reminded myself as I read through them that this is not the story of the devices, but rather the story of the men behind them, and that story could hardly be better told. This distinction brought to mind Kate Colquhoun's delightful, "Taste: The Story of Britain Through Its Cooking:" the reader need not get hung up on the recipes described by the author; their significance lies in their time and place and what they reflected of their preparers and consumers. So it is with "The Power Makers." Professor Klein tells the story of the great inventors and their innovations so seamlessly and authoritatively that I would rank him right up there with the great historians of my reading experience, Ferguson, Schama, Hibbert, Porter, Anderson, Farwell and, well, you get the idea. Finally, have you ever interrupted a really pleasurable history read and thought to yourself, I wonder if the author enjoyed writing this as much as I am enjoying reading it? My guess Klein certainly did and had some very good idea that he was producing not only the definitive popular history of the subject but a book that is nothing short of a total joy to read. Highly recommended.

A good history with shaky technology writing

A historian of business and society, Professor Klein's has written well on these two topics, an inspiration for techies like me, bringing back the pride I felt in the 1950s in reading biographies of inventors and scientists, and building electromechanical gadgets. A background frame of reference is provided based on a very young man attending the US centennial exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876, where a huge Corliss steam engine was the star, and powered many other machines. Electrical exhibits were little more than scientific curiosities. Later the same man attended the 1893 Columbian Exhibition in Chicago. Here a hundred thousand light bulbs and hundreds of arc lights and dozens of machines were powered by electric generators or alternators, themselves powered by steam engines very much in the background. Finally the same man, quite old, attended the 1939 World's Fair in Queens, NYC. Now electricity was a given, and new appliances, radio, and even early TV as well as fluorescent lights were on display. The new star was the internal combustion engine. Cars had changed the landscape and were promoted as most desirable possessions for an unlimited future. Steam trains still ruled, but electric light rail, subway and elevated lines made densely populated cities livable. Steam engines are shown be have been empirical creations of tinkers, basically. Newcomen, Watt, Evans, Fitch, Rumsey, Trevithick, Fulton and many others are described. Personalities, business tribulations and/or success, acceptance of inventions, and patent fights are all there. These aspects were very well done. Later the move to steam turbines for more thermal efficiency appears. Early work on electricity that will remind you of grade school physics and chemistry courses comes next. Galvani, Volta, Ampere, Joule, Rumford, Carnot, Clausius, Faraday and others are well described. Then the applications guys -- Edison, Westinghouse, Tesla, Steinmetz, Thomson and dozens of others are portrayed well. Here, too, the battles over patents that consumed so much effort and time received proper attention. Formation of General Electric around 1892 from Thomson-Houston and several other companies, especially Edison Electric is described, with smaller Westinghouse as the only significant independent for generators, alternators, motors, power stations, lighting and all. The battle of the currents, direct (Edison) and alternating (Westinghouse), gets the attention it deserves, including Edison's provision of alternating current for the first executions by electricity, and his vicious coinage of the term "Westinghoused". The adoption of 60-hertz frequency for alternating current and the voltages we have known all our lives has a history also. Finally the slow rise from about 1890 and sudden fall around 1930 of Samuel Insull, formerly an assistant to Edison, is shown. Here and elsewhere, the takeover by financial tycoons or bankers of companies already proven successful is described. Insull's

Interesting book

A very interesting book, well written and obviously well researched---in some instances a bit too detailed but I am not an engineer and someone with more training, might find the detail worthwhile---

History Does Rhyme

The value of this book shows most clearly in Chapter 13, Competition and Electrocution. An enterprising screenplay writer could develop a script that would rival, "There Will Be Blood." We see the clash in Thomas Edison, George Westinghouse, capital punishment, a commodity speculator names Hyacinthe Secretan, an obscure engineer named Harold Brown, and all the forces of growth in modern society colliding in New York City at the turn of the 19th century. Reading that chapter made me think about how little things have changed in society over the past 100 years and that we're still living in the Modern World after all. Professor Klein takes a detailed (and at times a painstakingly detailed) look at the people and ideas that led to the invention and distribution of energy and power in America from roughly 1880 through 1930. The first half of the book is a slow read. It traces the biography of key people (James Watt, for example) and ideas (the steam engine) in a fairly straightforward, linear narrative. It is a long setup, but the back half of the book pays it all off as Klein then begins to weave a broader narrative of social forces (politics, economics, journalism, and those great characters with American grit, ambition, and craziness) with these key people and ideas. It's hard not to see this same kind of script playing out in America (and the rest of the world through globalization) with new techologies like computers. In many ways the world is not PostModern, but still in a Modern phase as we learn how to integrate new techologies into normal human society. It's just hilarious to read about politicians and journalists howling about capital punishment (yes), greed, science, and virtue from 1880. It's like reading the New York Times today. Just change the names and you've got the same kinds of challenges, problems, and questions. A fascinating book that requires a little commitment through the early chapters.
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